8
lng I 'Y· '.er· :his and ure per· with Take nble ring on ·own inet. . and lead who ; en- itage Uhe :Wake Unbenity, Winston-Salem, N.C., friday, May 4, 1979 No.26 Gradu·ation ·by Edward Allen Staff Wrirrv · The honorable Peter Jay, am- .bassador from Great Britain to the United States, will address the commencement audience Monday, May 21, at 9:30 a.m. as the 1979 graduates receive their diplomas in the time-honored ceremony on the University Plaza. Jay will be the recipient of the honorary degree of doctor of letters, sponsored by Donald 0. Schoon· maker, associate professor of politics. Three other honorary degrees will · be conferred on Reynolds Price; Samuel Richardson Hill, Jr. and Thomas Eugene Worrell. Reynolds Price is an educator and a novelist, and his honorary doctor of letters will be sponsored by Kenan Professor of Humanities Germaine Bree. Hill is currently the director of tile Medical Education Program in the University of Alabama System. His honorary doctor of science will be sponsored by Richard Janeway, the dean of Bowman Gray School of Medicine. Relief, fo pervade . with the honorary degree of reception and buffet from 4 to 7 p.m. Robert Seymour, pastor of the Olln of humanities, sponsored bY, Lee on the Reynolda Hall patio. · T. Rabley Methodist Church in Potter, professor .of English. ·· · Four students are competing for Chapel Hill. Each pastor is a parent . For parents, frtends and faculty, the A.D. Ward presentation for the of a graduate . this year's graduation ceremonies best baccalaureate address. The Each senior is issued two blue and will feature the· frequent use of the :students and their addresses are two yellow tickets. Should the fledgling carillon. John Linda .Crocker, -"Revelation for a -ceremony be moved into Wait Harvey of the Univers1ty of Skeptical Conservative;" Jim' Chapel due to rain, only blue tickets Wisconsin at Madison will perform Saintsing, "If, Zen;" Kathy Webb, will be honored. the special service and per· "The Oedipus Complex" ahd Jeanne The proceedings will be carried by forinance, "Seven Biblical Sket· Whitman, "Look Homeward." closed circuit television in the lower chcs." Chevis F. Horne, retiring pastor of auditorium, Room 104 in Wingate Student ·. participation in the First Baptist Church in ·Mar· Hall, and in Davis Chapel. graduation is l.imited this. year. tinsville, Vi_rginia, will give the According to Carlton Mitchell, one Hansford Frederrc Johnson wlll play .baccalaureate· sermon Sunday at 8 of the faculty marshals the actual three pieces on the guitar, including p.m. Horne is a graduate of the WF conferral of degrees wiil take about "Sarabande," by George F. Handel, class of '36. two hours for approximately 950 "Lyenda," by Albenzi, and Other portions of the com· graduates. Mitchell feels this in· "Recuerdos de Ia Alhambra," by mencement exercises will be per· dividual conferral of degrees con- F.E. Tarrega. formed by John W. Phillips, pastor tributes to the personal warmth of Other graduation ceremonies nf the Poplar Creek Baptist Church; each person having his ''place in the include the Jaw school hooding R.O. Satchell, pastor of the Spence sun.'' - ceremony Sunday at 2 p.m., the. Baptist Churcli in Snow. Hill, .. Seniors should check with the awards and honors convocation Maryland; the Rev. Frank H. treasurer's office to see if all ac· Sunday at 2:30p.m. in the Fine Arts Jl(!oper III, a forme·r Southern counts are cleared and to· determine Theatre and the president's Raptist to Israel, and if they are due credit.· Council restri-cts co-chairman . . - . .. . . by Amy James Associale Edffor . . Myatt views the.action as "almost a censorship." Innil-'kes you wonder what you can and cannot say," she said. Book(ngit Thomas Worrell, graduated from WF with a bachelor of science degree, is a lawyer · and a newspaperman and is now a magnate of ma·ny media en- terprises. Worrell will be presented Christy Myatt, past co-chairman of the }Jonor Council, has been restricted by the Judicial Council from hearing any further cases brought before the Honor Council this year. The Judicial Council did not remove Myatt completely from the Honor Council. Removal from office must be through the impeachment process with a two-thirds majority vote of the SG legislature required for conviction, The Honor Council js "hemmed in" bY students and by the Judicial Council, according to Myatt. The recent action of the Judicial Council was cited by Myatt as the third time this year the body has moved to broaden its power. . The library wm not be lonely this weekend as the end·of-semester . crunch hits. - . - .Jay Helvey, SG president, said "SG has not been contacted by the .Judicial Council nor informed about its intentions." Committees define relationship Myatt, whose term as co· chairman ended on April 15, ·of· ficially rem a ins on the Honor Council until the end of the year. According to Myatt, she had no One of the earlier two incidents The Judicial Council informed knowledge of the action before was the rejection of another hearing Myatt by means of a IEitter received receiving the letter. She said she for the mid-April case in which on May 1 that as of that date she was was never asked to testify before the Myatt made the comment that not ·to .hear any further cases. The .Judicial Board in reference to this brought about the letter to her from action was taken by the Judicial matter. Myatt thus considers the the Judicial CounciL Thomas had by Rick Feathers resolved during the meeting, President James Ralph AssiStanreduor , Scales, said, "There is agreement, but until a com· After a 3lh hour meeting at Knoll wood Baptist .plete set of agreements, with all its interrelatedness, Church Friday, April 27, negotiators for the Baptist ·can be finished, riothing specific will.be announced." ·State Convention and Wake Forest University Most of the issues were fundamental and concerned r:epQrtec:! substantial progress in resolving the con· the power limitations of truitees anti questi&n of flicts which divide the ll!stitutions. university owners}lip said. '·· ·, · Council because of a comment made action taken to be harsh. requested the evidence of the case by Myatt in m.id·April. . be reheard without ·Myatt's . ·-· _ .......... _ , ... _.- _ •...• ;ijoQor."presenee. • , • · ... · ... -. · · · Tlie.comment referred to soQleo.ne ( ounc1l for four years, fiilmg the co- . James W. Mason, chairman of the board of ., ". . of said the committees bad come. .to agreement on' a negotiations before the May 29 General Boar4 coilvenant rather than legal relationship between the meeting. involved in a case wliich wiis before chairmanship this year. Myatt stated she has always taken the Honor Councii'. The .Tudicial Council has the responsibility for her actions con· two bodies. These meetings may determine the fate of the According to Frank R. Campbell, chairman of the $936,937 in Baptist funds currently being held in Baptist Committee for Christian Higher Education, escrow by the convention. Negotiation leaders hope agreement had been reached on the written definition they will iron out the controversies that have marred The Judicial Council, which is power of yet no to cerning the Honor Council. In made up of five faculty members, 1·emove off1c!als. Accor.dmg to reference to the case in question, she 1 wo administrators and two Myatt, she m1ght have g1ven her said her remark referring to the students, is primarily an appeals !'l'signation had the cou.ncil asked for person on trial had been in jest. The body for Student Judicial Board and II. The letter received comm.ent was made an hour before Honor Council decisions. her from hearmg cases wh1ch 1s the the trial. · major duty of an Honor Council of that relationship. . the relationship for the past several years. Campbell added that the prevailing amount of the According to Campbell, the university still occupies One ot its powers is "to establish and direct the undergraduate judicial systt!m so as to insure justice and due proc_ess to all members of the undergraduate academi<; c 0 mritmunity.'' member. ' In a letter to Waddill, David meetings was excellent. He hopes to accomplish an a place in the family. He said the convention equivalent mood when negotiations resume May 11. acknowledges both a legal and covenant relationship His committee will submit a report of their with the university. agreements to the Convention's General Board which "There will .continue to be a warm and, I hope, meets May 28·30 on the university campus. fruitful relationship with our Baptist people of North "Altho,ugh there has been agreement, there are Carolina," Scales said, According to. Marcellus E. Waddill, chairman of the Judicial Council and professor of mathematics, the council in· terpreted this power to mean that at times, administrative action would need to be taken to uphold· justice and the integrity of the judicial Thomas and Kelly Wrenn, . present co-chairmen of the Honor Council, state "the Judicial Council consulted neither the co-chairmen of the Honor Council or members of the SG before substantial differences of opinion between the parties In retrospect he added, "It's been a year of concern, involved," Mason said. Because the ultimate decision but I have been encouraged by the heartwarming must- be approved by the General Board, the con· demonstration that many hundreds of alumni and vention and the· board trustees, be said committee students. have given concerning the school." 1 aking this action." , Thomas and Wrenn also state in the letter "we fear that the dectiion is not in line with the Student Body Constitution and could possibly threaten the independence ·of the judicial sy&tem·'' results should be regarded with·"guarded optimism." He praised "these considerations of respect for Nothing bas been released about what issues were values of the churclt relationships." . " system. · Smiley survives CU raft debate · When it was all over, history had babyhood," Baxley said. "The life ja.cket, he was supJ)orted by by won. After listening to one five· dominance of mathematical uq- students wearing green t·shirts that minute statement and two ·two· derstanding is important to our read "anthropologists do it in the All academic society has been destroyed and only four educated men survive: John Basley, a mathe- mli.tician; Gregory Pritchard, a philosopher; David Smiley, a historian and Ned Woodall, an an· thropologist. Every university and library_ has been annihi Ia ted. There is one raft which can accommodate only one man. Which discipline is most likely to recreate a new system of academic thought? This was the hypothetical situation that 500 students were faced with Tuesday evening at the first CU Raft Debate. The audience was to decide which academic , discipline was to lead the remaining uneducated masses in developing a new minute rebuttals from ·each survival." dirt." professor, the audience's applause In his rebuttal, Baxley sum- Proposing that anthropology indicated Smiley was the winner. mariwd, "The missing fields can be studies "all that relates to the The other three then theoreticallv and redeveloped. universe, .. Woodall questioned, jumped from the raft. · will provide the best "Who studtes the philosophy of the pattern." Eskimos or Navajos?" "History is the only place where one meets historians, philosophers, anthropologists, war ·and peace, crime and law, literature, music and art, each in its own appropriate and time. All this would be lost if I drown tonight," Smiley told the crowd in Reynolda Main lounge. Finishing his speech, Smiley implored the audience, "If 'you vote for me to drown, keep all three other men because you will need all the help you can get." "Mathematics is a science in its Prichard, said math and history do not include the essentials of the others and that anthroJ?ology cannot be stretched to include areas above and beiow the earth. He pointed out that all four men had a philosophy degree because they had their doctor of philosophy degrees iri mathematics, history and an· thropology, They all have Ph.D's, he said. Woodall spoke last and mounted the most popular opposition to Smiley's lead. Wearing an orange Under the direction of an- · thropology, societies would 1 a in respectfor other societies based on understanding of other cultures, he said. Woodall's anthem for all , the societiea. would be "different strokes for different folks." The historian, Smiley, began his . argument saying that history is the collective memory of our race. "Think what it would be like to live < ('Ontinued on page two) Examination policies explained by Lynn Knapp Assoc•ate Editor The examination policies of Wake Forest are "neither the most rigid nor the most flexible", Thomas E. Mullen, dean of the college, said. Some confusion has resulted during examination as to what restrictions professors and students· must follow. The Committee on Academic Affairs establishes the rules and some of these rules are confirmed by 1 a faculty yote, Mullen said. The policy is in a middle ground, '.'as an• so many I at WF," he Said He noted the administration feels . . - / it has a golden mean, but that label may be "going too far." "II is a good deal more flexible than the policy in those colleges which try to have examinations completed in less than a week, Mullen said. Examinations will be spread over seven days this semester. "And th!.'n there are others that allow students to take exams almost aJiheir·nwn time," he said. The prcst•nt policy, adopted April 12, 1971 "Any professor at his dis!' ret icin c can 1 schedule· alter· nativl' l'Xilminations if the additional examination scheduled falls within the time period allowed for examinations. It is assumed that the reading day an'd evenings could be used for such alternativl' scheduling." However, this ·policy does not require that the instructor· bl' obligated to offer an a ltcrnale timt' sch<'dule for an examination. It was the understanding of lhl' ('ommitlee that a student" should havl' an opportunity to tak<' an pxamination at thl' originally sc·heduled time if thl' student preferred to do so," Mullen 'said. Unless 100 percent of a class vnl<'d to thl' sch(•dult'Cl daiP, tht• instructor must also offer the examination on . tbe originally scheduled time. Although professors may schedule alternate examinations times, without the consent of ·,the Com- mittee on Academic Affairs, he cannot schedule a final examination during the last five days of classes. This ruling, voted upon by the raculty, cannot be departed from unless the professor has a serious conflict. He can deviate from norm by applying to the committee for a <·hange 1 Mullen said. (Con't. par;etbree) She stated she had "forgotten" the comment by the time of the trial. She made no prejudicial remarks during the proceeding, according to Myatt. Myatt said she can understand why the Judicial Board took the action. However, she does not know why she was not informed that any action against her was being taken before the Judicial Council sent the letter to her. According to Waddill, the Judicial Council feels "what we did was· , · · fair."

Gradu·ation - Wake Forest University · Wisconsin at Madison will perform Saintsing, "If, Zen;" Kathy Webb, will be honored. the special service and per· "The Oedipus Complex" ahd

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I

'Y· '.er· :his and ure

per· with ~ach Take nble ring ~ on ·own inet. . and lead who ; en­itage Uhe

:Wake Fo~~l Unbenity, Winston-Salem, N.C., friday, May 4, 1979 No.26

Gradu·ation ·by Edward Allen

Staff Wrirrv ·

The honorable Peter Jay, am­. bassador from Great Britain to the United States, will address the commencement audience Monday, May 21, at 9:30 a.m. as the 1979 graduates receive their diplomas in the time-honored ceremony on the University Plaza.

Jay will be the recipient of the honorary degree of doctor of letters, sponsored by Donald 0. Schoon· maker, associate professor of politics.

Three other honorary degrees will · be conferred on Reynolds Price; Samuel Richardson Hill, Jr. and Thomas Eugene Worrell.

Reynolds Price is an educator and a novelist, and his honorary doctor of letters will be sponsored by Kenan Professor of Humanities Germaine Bree. S~muel Hill is currently the

director of tile Medical Education Program in the University of Alabama System. His honorary doctor of science will be sponsored by Richard Janeway, the dean of Bowman Gray School of Medicine.

Relief, reg~ef fo pervade pla~a . with the honorary degree of .docto~ reception and buffet from 4 to 7 p.m. Robert Seymour, pastor of the Olln of humanities, sponsored bY, Lee on the Reynolda Hall patio. · T. Rabley Methodist Church in Potter, professor .of English. ·· · Four students are competing for Chapel Hill. Each pastor is a parent .

For parents, frtends and faculty, the A.D. Ward presentation for the of a graduate . this year's graduation ceremonies best baccalaureate address. The Each senior is issued two blue and will feature the· frequent use of the :students and their addresses are two yellow tickets. Should the fledgling carillon. Carillone~ John Linda .Crocker, -"Revelation for a -ceremony be moved into Wait Harvey of the Univers1ty of Skeptical Conservative;" Jim' Chapel due to rain, only blue tickets Wisconsin at Madison will perform Saintsing, "If, Zen;" Kathy Webb, will be honored. the special service and per· "The Oedipus Complex" ahd Jeanne The proceedings will be carried by forinance, "Seven Biblical Sket· Whitman, "Look Homeward." closed circuit television in the lower chcs." Chevis F. Horne, retiring pastor of auditorium, Room 104 in Wingate

Student ·. participation in the First Baptist Church in ·Mar· Hall, and in Davis Chapel. graduation is l.imited this. year. tinsville, Vi_rginia, will give the According to Carlton Mitchell, one Hansford Frederrc Johnson wlll play .baccalaureate· sermon Sunday at 8 of the faculty marshals the actual three pieces on the guitar, including p.m. Horne is a graduate of the WF conferral of degrees wiil take about "Sarabande," by George F. Handel, class of '36. two hours for approximately 950 "Lyenda," by Albenzi, and Other portions of the com· graduates. Mitchell feels this in· "Recuerdos de Ia Alhambra," by mencement exercises will be per· dividual conferral of degrees con­F.E. Tarrega. formed by John W. Phillips, pastor tributes to the personal warmth of

Other graduation ceremonies nf the Poplar Creek Baptist Church; each person having his ''place in the include the Jaw school hooding R.O. Satchell, pastor of the Spence sun.'' -ceremony Sunday at 2 p.m., the. Baptist Churcli in Snow. Hill, .. Seniors should check with the awards and honors convocation Maryland; the Rev. Frank H. treasurer's office to see if all ac· Sunday at 2:30p.m. in the Fine Arts Jl(!oper III, a forme·r Southern counts are cleared and to· determine Theatre and the president's Raptist mission~ry to Israel, and if they are due credit.·

Council restri-cts co-chairman . . - . .. . .

by Amy James Associale Edffor

. . Myatt views the.action as "almost

a censorship." Innil-'kes you wonder what you can and cannot say," she said.

Book(ngit

Thomas Worrell, graduated from WF with a bachelor of science degree, is a lawyer · and a newspaperman and is now a magnate of ma·ny media en­terprises. Worrell will be presented

Christy Myatt, past co-chairman of the }Jonor Council, has been restricted by the Judicial Council from hearing any further cases brought before the Honor Council this year.

The Judicial Council did not remove Myatt completely from the Honor Council. Removal from office must be through the impeachment process with a two-thirds majority vote of the SG legislature required for conviction,

The Honor Council js "hemmed in" bY students and by the Judicial Council, according to Myatt. The recent action of the Judicial Council was cited by Myatt as the third time this year the body has moved to broaden its power.

. The library wm not be lonely this weekend as the end·of-semester . crunch hits. -

. - ~

.Jay Helvey, SG president, said "SG has not been contacted by the .Judicial Council nor informed about its intentions." Committees define relationship

Myatt, whose term as co· chairman ended on April 15, ·of· ficially rem a ins on the Honor Council until the end of the year. According to Myatt, she had no One of the earlier two incidents

The Judicial Council informed knowledge of the action before was the rejection of another hearing Myatt by means of a IEitter received receiving the letter. She said she for the mid-April case in which on May 1 that as of that date she was was never asked to testify before the Myatt made the comment that not ·to .hear any further cases. The .Judicial Board in reference to this brought about the letter to her from action was taken by the Judicial matter. Myatt thus considers the the Judicial CounciL Thomas had

by Rick Feathers resolved during the meeting, President James Ralph AssiStanreduor , Scales, said, "There is agreement, but until a com·

After a 3lh hour meeting at Knoll wood Baptist . plete set of agreements, with all its interrelatedness, Church Friday, April 27, negotiators for the Baptist ·can be finished, riothing specific will.be announced."

·State Convention and Wake Forest University Most of the issues were fundamental and concerned r:epQrtec:! substantial progress in resolving the con· the power limitations of truitees anti th.~ questi&n of flicts which divide the ll!stitutions. university owners}lip 31ld·contro1~·~~les said. '·· ·, ·

Council because of a comment made action taken to be harsh. requested the evidence of the case by Myatt in m.id·April. . be reheard without ·Myatt's

. ·-· _ .......... _ , ... _.- _ •...• ---.,.~~a_tL tw~.~.er.v,e9.o~ ,~ll~ ;ijoQor."presenee. • , • · ... · .· ... -. · · · Tlie.comment referred to soQleo.ne ( ounc1l for four years, fiilmg the co- .

James W. Mason, chairman of the board of trus~ec;s.1 ., ". ~t~p~e!J. dQe~ . .QP.t-.-~ti~R~te ·~~mpl~~to~ of ·~e.·· said the committees bad come . .to agreement on' a negotiations before the May 29 General Boar4 coilvenant rather than legal relationship between the meeting.

involved in a case wliich wiis before chairmanship this year. Myatt stated she has always taken the Honor Councii'. The .Tudicial Council has the responsibility for her actions con·

two bodies. These meetings may determine the fate of the According to Frank R. Campbell, chairman of the $936,937 in Baptist funds currently being held in

Baptist Committee for Christian Higher Education, escrow by the convention. Negotiation leaders hope agreement had been reached on the written definition they will iron out the controversies that have marred

The Judicial Council, which is power of reyi~w yet no po~er to cerning the Honor Council. In made up of five faculty members, 1·emove off1c!als. Accor.dmg to reference to the case in question, she 1 wo administrators and two Myatt, she m1ght have g1ven her said her remark referring to the students, is primarily an appeals !'l'signation had the cou.ncil asked for person on trial had been in jest. The body for Student Judicial Board and II. The letter ~he received _re~oves comm.ent was made an hour before Honor Council decisions. her from hearmg cases wh1ch 1s the the trial.

· major duty of an Honor Council of that relationship. . the relationship for the past several years. Campbell added that the prevailing amount of the According to Campbell, the university still occupies One ot its powers is "to establish

and direct the undergraduate judicial systt!m so as to insure justice and due proc_ess to all members of the undergraduate academi<; c0mritmunity.''

member. ' In a letter to Waddill, David meetings was excellent. He hopes to accomplish an a place in the ~aptist family. He said the convention

equivalent mood when negotiations resume May 11. acknowledges both a legal and covenant relationship His committee will submit a report of their with the university. agreements to the Convention's General Board which "There will .continue to be a warm and, I hope, meets May 28·30 on the university campus. fruitful relationship with our Baptist people of North

"Altho,ugh there has been agreement, there are Carolina," Scales said, According to. Marcellus E. Waddill, chairman of the Judicial Council and professor of mathematics, the council in· terpreted this power to mean that at times, administrative action would need to be taken to uphold· justice and the integrity of the judicial

Thomas and Kelly Wrenn, . present co-chairmen of the Honor Council, state "the Judicial Council consulted neither the co-chairmen of the Honor Council or members of the SG before

substantial differences of opinion between the parties In retrospect he added, "It's been a year of concern, involved," Mason said. Because the ultimate decision but I have been encouraged by the heartwarming must- be approved by the General Board, the con· demonstration that many hundreds of alumni and vention and the· board ~f trustees, be said committee students. have given concerning the school."

1 a king this action." , Thomas and Wrenn also state in

the letter "we fear that the dectiion is not in line with the Student Body Constitution and could possibly threaten the independence ·of the judicial sy&tem·''

results should be regarded with·"guarded optimism." He praised "these considerations of respect for Nothing bas been released about what issues were values of the churclt relationships." .

" system. ·

Smiley survives CU raft debate · When it was all over, history had babyhood," Baxley said. "The life ja.cket, he was supJ)orted by

by M~~:!!;~~n~erfoot won. After listening to one five· dominance of mathematical uq- students wearing green t·shirts that minute statement and two ·two· derstanding is important to our read "anthropologists do it in the All academic society has been

destroyed and only four educated men survive: John Basley, a mathe­mli.tician; Gregory Pritchard, a philosopher; David Smiley, a historian and Ned Woodall, an an· thropologist.

Every university and library_ has been annihi Ia ted. There is one raft which can accommodate only one man. Which discipline is most likely to recreate a new system of academic thought?

This was the hypothetical situation that 500 students were faced with Tuesday evening at the first CU Raft Debate. The audience was to decide which academic

, discipline was to lead the remaining uneducated masses in developing a new so~iety,

minute rebuttals from ·each survival." dirt." professor, the audience's applause In his rebuttal, Baxley sum- Proposing that anthropology indicated Smiley was the winner. mariwd, "The missing fields can be studies "all that relates to the

The other three then theoreticallv revitaliu~d and redeveloped. universe, .. Woodall questioned, jumped from the raft. · M~thPmatics will provide the best "Who studtes the philosophy of the

pattern." Eskimos or Navajos?" "History is the only place where

one meets historians, philosophers, anthropologists, war ·and peace, crime and law, literature, music and art, each in its own appropriate pl~ce and time. All this would be lost if I drown tonight," Smiley told the crowd in Reynolda Main lounge.

Finishing his speech, Smiley implored the audience, "If 'you vote for me to drown, keep all three other men because you will need all the help you can get."

"Mathematics is a science in its

Prichard, said math and history do not include the essentials of the others and that anthroJ?ology cannot be stretched to include areas above and beiow the earth. He pointed out that all four men had a philosophy degree because they had their doctor of philosophy degrees iri mathematics, history and an· thropology, They all have Ph.D's, he said.

Woodall spoke last and mounted the most popular opposition to Smiley's lead. Wearing an orange

Under the direction of an- · thropology, societies would main~ 1 a in respectfor other societies based on understanding of other cultures, he said.

Woodall's anthem for all , the societiea. would be "different strokes for different folks."

The historian, Smiley, began his . argument saying that history is the collective memory of our race.

"Think what it would be like to live

< ('Ontinued on page two)

Examination policies explained by Lynn Knapp

Assoc•ate Editor

The examination policies of Wake Forest are "neither the most rigid nor the most flexible", Thomas E. Mullen, dean of the college, said.

Some confusion has resulted during examination as to what restrictions professors and students· must follow.

The Committee on Academic Affairs establishes the rules and some of these rules are confirmed by

1 a faculty yote, Mullen said. The policy is in a middle ground,

'.'as an• so many I hin~s at WF," he Said

He noted the administration feels

~- .· . . -/

it has a golden mean, but that label may be "going too far."

"II is a good deal more flexible than the policy in those colleges which try to have examinations completed in less than a week, Mullen said. Examinations will be spread over seven days this semester.

"And th!.'n there are others that allow students to take exams almost aJiheir·nwn time," he said.

The prcst•nt policy, adopted April 12, 1971 ~1l.ltt's, "Any professor at his dis!' ret icin c can 1 schedule· alter· nativl' l'Xilminations if the additional examination scheduled falls within

the time period allowed for examinations. It is assumed that the reading day an'd evenings could be used for such alternativl' scheduling."

However, this ·policy does not require that the instructor· bl' obligated to offer an a ltcrnale timt' sch<'dule for an examination.

It was the understanding of lhl' ('ommitlee that a student" should havl' an opportunity to tak<' an pxamination at thl' originally sc·heduled time if thl' student preferred to do so," Mullen 'said.

Unless 100 percent of a class vnl<'d to rh;~n~P thl' sch(•dult'Cl daiP, tht•

instructor must also offer the examination on . tbe originally scheduled time.

Although professors may schedule alternate examinations times, without the consent of ·,the Com­mittee on Academic Affairs, he cannot schedule a final examination during the last five days of classes.

This ruling, voted upon by the raculty, cannot be departed from unless the professor has a serious conflict. He can deviate from norm by applying to the committee for a <·hange1 Mullen said.

(Con't. ~n par;etbree)

She stated she had "forgotten" the comment by the time of the trial. She made no prejudicial remarks during the proceeding, according to Myatt.

Myatt said she can understand why the Judicial Board took the action. However, she does not know why she was not informed that any action against her was being taken before the Judicial Council sent the letter to her.

According to Waddill, the Judicial Council feels "what we did was· , · · fair."

History envelopes heritage of man <Continued from page one>

have been helpful in the morning -hours of creation by figuring and measuring. However in the ev\'ning hours he would go off on tangents of his own, he said.

\

· PersOhriel vacate jobS by Doug Rees Oregon, and Gillian accountancy. ·

!>uiiWriter ·' Overing, who' is working - G. E.ric Matthews, who Nine faculty members on a doctorate at the has spent the last two

and. one administrator University of Buffalo; · years at a · Naval will not return for the fall Two in embers of the . Research Lab, will join 1979 semester. romance languages the physics department

Very l Becker department are also as an assistant professor. associate professor of 1 e a v in g , G a r y John Earle, of the biology, will leave the Ljungquist, an assistant sociology department, -J. university at-end of- this profesS'or of French, who · Ned Woodall of an~ year. ..., was not granted tenure . t h ro polo gy, . John

Becker will Leave and Mary Thomas, a~ Williams· of psychology,

in a world in which every event, natural or man­madl•,came as a surprise, in which human beings would have to begin all over again to invent the wheel, control fires, learn to speak and reason, find out through costly trial and error what plants were edible and which animals were hostile, develop tools, shelter, clothing, even to work out the high risk activity of mere survival.

If God were a histor· ian. he would have been helpful in the evening hours recording the days events. But more probably he would spend time pondering "what once was," he said.

~;1:}~ teaching altogether; and . instructor in Spanish. Roger. Hegstrom of take over his father's Julian Bueno, a visiting chemistry,. and James dairy farm in Minnesota. instructor in Spanish, will O'Flaherty and Larry His replacement has not take Thomas's place, and West of the· G·erman yet been named. Ruth Mesavage will join department will aU be on

In the English the depiu~tment in place leave of absence next

Burn, baby, burn """ pno1a by cathy 11o11an department, two visiting of Ljungquist. · semester.

According to. ·Prit­chard, if God were an anthropologist, he would be helpful on the sixth day but would consider things beneath and above the earth unimportant ..

Warm sp~g weather draws out a bevy of SUB• bathers as evidenced by . Babcock's populous sun deck.

assistai1t _ professors Virginia Keller, a Returning· from leave:~· Henry Sayre and his wife, visiting · instructor in of absence will be· Jane Laur~ Rice-Sayre, are education, ·will leave at C a r m -i c h a e 1 o f leavmg. Both were the end of this year, as mathematics and Harold

"That would be the state of things if you subtracted the collective memory of. mankind," Smiley said.

But' . if God .were a philosopher, Pritchard said, he would enjoy what he has done and, on the 7th day, ponder and look forward to what he will do in the second week of creation.

Two receive scholarship unable to find jobs at the will Daniel ·Richman, a Tedford ot - speech same school; so she will .vis.iting assistant communication and teach a~ Oregon. state, P r o f e s s o r o f theatre arts. _ and he w1ll write for a few .mathematics. · Calvin Johnson,

At one point during Smiley's rebuttal, Baxley pronounced a resounding "Amen" to one of his ideas. Smiley shot back, "He thinks I'm God."

Pritchard wondered what God would be like if he were one of the four professors.

If God were a mathematician he would

All is not lost in any case because the fun­damentals of all four dlsciplines are known to the four men, Baxley said. ...

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Two Wake Forest sophomores are recent recipients of Harry S Truman Scholarships for 1979.

Susan Darnell of Vienna, West Virginia and Mike Riley of Charlotte were awarded the $20,000 scholarships, which will provide $5,000

each year for . the remaining two years of college and the first two years of graduate study at the university of their choice.

The scholarships are awarded yearly to one student from each of the fifty states. They are based upon academic performance and corn· rnitment to government.

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Eligible students were asked to write essays, take a test and appear before a panel.

Darnell and Riley were selected by the panel as WF's two allotted representatives, and essays again were written to be sent to the

-Truman Scholarship Foundation in Washington.

This is the first year that schools have been allowed to have two representatives' names sent to the Truman Scholarship Foundation for consideration.

WF nominees have received the award four times during the three years that the scholar­ship has been in existence. WF is the only private school that has repeated a winning performance.

Other Truman Scholars at Wake Forest are senior Jeanne Whitman and junior Neil Rector.

y e a r s . T h e i r Joining the WF faculty director of residence life replacements are David next year will be Michael for men, will be·leaving to Brailow, who is currently Wyzan, in the economics look for a job fu the dean working on his doctorate department, and Lee G. of students office at

the Univer of Knight, in business and another_.school.

Check -out approaches placed.- in the residence hall. These

. b~ !!r~~~key ticles' will be donated to GOOdwili. ·. Spring closhig will b-e on Wednesday, 'AU students· attending summer_ school

May 16, at 5 p.m. Only gradilating ·sen· will be housed in Babcock dormitory d · · · · th Jloom assignments will be made on a

iors, stu ents parbclpatmg 10· e com· first come-first· served basis. All mencem:ent exercises and registered guests Will be allowed to remain on \lSSignments will be for double .OC· campus until Monday, May 21, at 5 p.m. cupancy so roommates must check-in

Students are reminded to follow the together. Check-in will be from 12 .until 5 check-out <procedure as posted in the p.m. on Sunday, May 27, and from 9 a.m. residence halls. Failure to comply with until noon on Monday • May 28. this process will result in a $25 fine. For the second. session, sign-up is

Storage information will be posted with fCheduled for 12 tll .5 p.m. Oil Sunday, the closing notices in each hall. Southern July 1, and fr~rn 9 ti}. noon on Monday, Bell will have representatives pn campus. J~y 2. Check-m. after May 28 ?r July 2 May 7 between noon and 4 and on May 10 ~Ill be done ~urmg regular office hours from 9 to 4 p.m. to collect equipment and 10 the housmg office, room 202-C, to issue credits. They will be stationed in Reynolda Hall. _ .

foyer of Reynolda Hall by the in- Payment for r.es1de~c;e hall . space formation desk. should be made w1th t'!llhon and fees. to

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Jo·bfess seniors resist.pa.,ic· PAGE mREEFriday, M.y 4; 1979. OLD GOLD AND BLACK

!f( ,,a

by 'setsy W akefleld , As8oclate eanor .

,.. p'anic· once he graduates and can start'feeling the' void. "I go through mild states of depression. My .

Tile panic came and went months ago. Now, seni9rs· without jobs are

''· l,'esigned to their nebulous . ., ... futures.

"I feel v~ry· normal," :. said Beth Burton, a

·.! psychology major. "I '·. never expected to go . ·:: through four· years and : ·; come .out with a job. :·<. When you come to ·a "i • liberal arts school;· you ''·'·don't expect somebody to ·. just hand you a job," ·

Many go. to graduate ~., school; But still more go .,;:!home for the summer and ·, ··keep looking. They i;:. comment that at 21 years .•: old, it is not. nornfal to =·'.have your whole life

planned out .. ~ . .

~~. ·~You just cannot get ,: , panicky in these last two . ~;.weeks,'.' Judy Watkins, a ;.·physical education

major, said. "If you panic too muchyou•n just grind

· yourself into the ground." . Mark Schurmeier will

doctor has me on tranquilizers," ·he joked.

For the most. part the, . pressure seniors feel to get a job comes from the

. placement office, their parents or friends, not from tP,emselves. "The_

placement office makes you feel that if in November you don't have your res11me · done and you're not 'inter,viewing, you don't really want a. job· anyway," ,llaid Marcia Banker, an English and economics. major.

"1 know I'll get a job eventually. I'm not afraid 'of starving to death," she. said. ·

Many seniors note1that their friends at state schools, and especially s~hools with larger

student bodies,· do .,not worry about their first year out of college as much as WF students do.

"It's easy to panic here because Wake Forest Is Pretty success-oriented," Watkins. said.

Lines at 5 a.m. in front 0~ the placement office to Sign . up . f~r interviews with local industries and banks were not unusual. "It seems so cut-throat,"

·she said. . "I don't think there are

· !Jlany opportunities for ~terviewsi" one senior said. "The placement office is more technically oriented·," Banker

. agreed. Most of the interviews

specified oniy business 01: ac.coqnting majors. "After a while I got ·pretty discouraged so I just · stopped going ·up there," Watkins said .

·; s_eniors without . jobs m~intain their sanity by retaining their self . ct)nfi!fence. Kim vy'illiams, an English

major, sai'l, "I don't feel worthless that I don't have a job.'' .. : .

"The main thing is to have confidence in yourself. You know you've received a good

· · liberal · art~ education;' · said Watkins. After all, that's the reason they came to Wake -Forest.

The relief of finally graduating overcomes the disappointment of being jobless. The most ·relieved, . however, are those that have landed a job. · "Very lucky, I guess," is the way Frank Frailey feels. Frailey is going home to. Pennsylvania to accept a full-time job at the company for which he works in the summers.

"It's a lot less pressure," he: said. "All yqu have to do is graduate." ·

Bruce Hopkin's is "ready to go." He began to worry right after football season about his futui'e. Last month he

. received word fl.o'm the Broyhill Furniture Company . that .. they wished to hire him. ms initial reaction was· "Thank God."

"It's a nice place to visit but I wouldn~t want to live here," Hopkins added. . "Facing · a . forty-hour w~k for the rest of your life is a basically in· credible feeling," said Brigitta Carlson, an art major who has accepted a job as pbone clerk Jor the Winston-Salem Journal.

"I'm glad to have· the job. It makes ine feel, good, but it doesn't make

Security arrests men me feel overly sue- byKathyClay cessful," she said. !iloiiWri..r ·

But those jobless bide Three black males who their time; "I don't feel had been seen in the area the pressure yet," said behind Kitchin House

. Schurmeier. . , were apprehended late On the whole, it's sad to Monday night. The report

leave, but it's better than was made by campus staying, they agree. As security by a member of Williams said, "It's been the Kitchin House four years but we're residence staff. hitting the road." Alton ~11, supervisor

of traffic . and security,

neither is to apJ>ear on the WF campus ag-ain and can be arrested on sight. Hill said the three · men are suspects for other crimE1s and the police are still in the process · of investigating them.

prehension was largely due to the excellent reporting of the residence staff of Kitchin House.

"The RA's and Head Residents know who belongs on campus and

_who doesn't," s_aid Hill.

.:;Exam policy offers • optzons said the subjects spotted the campus security, got. into a Chevrolet Monte Carlo. and attempted to leave_ the area ... , The suspects were stopped at Wingate and Wake Forest Roads and identified. Hill said charges were m~de against one of the men in regard to an order for his arrest pending a 1977 off­campus incident.

Hill wished to em· phasize that none_ -of. the , three men were · in any l.vay, presently or ·for­merly, associated with the University. Hill also .~dded that the aP.·

"They are much better equipped to ·make an evaluation and act. This incident is definitely a good example."

~erman professQr prints translatiQn

.. :; (continued from page ·.·one)

-Marcellus Waddill,

·: chairman· of the com-mittee, said in his three

;;• years on the committee, , ·· he could not remember .... that such special treat­\· ment ~ad been requested '" . by a professor.

He noted the alter· native examination

~-· policy was adopted after l C· students voiced com­' r,, plaints. ~ ·~. Another rule . adopted \. by the committee was the

' stipulation that a student could ask for an alter· native to an exam if he

:; had three examinations : in a row.

Mullen said three examinations "in a row meant that precisely. For example, a student with ·two examinations in one day and one the next morning."

A common miscon· ception among students is that professors are restricted from giving tests other than final examinations during the last week of classes.

This measure, in· traduced by Student GovernJilent, bas been. considered several times but never adopted, Mullen said. ·

. "The real reason was, . in my judgment, as I · heard the arguments,

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that a number of professors. have their courses highly organized and give hour exams at the end of each section of material. They felt that giving ·a test before they had completed the material didn't make senS'e," Mullen said.1

Students with questions or complaints about the examination policy should speak to their instructor first, he said.

Then if the student cannot resolve the issue, he can seek aid from his advisor., the head of the department or the dean's office.

"I wouldn't want to give very much en-

couragement to sucn a 'that policy," he S";d . student. I don't think the "" Committee on Academic The committee has Affairs would be likely to considered ~any dif· grant a petition to a ferent policies and is not student wbo had ' ' j us t' f o 11 owing problems other than the tradition," he said. ones .covered in the The examination class present policy," be said_. schedule is made by Toby

Hpwever, illness and Hale, assistant dean of extenuating circumst· the college. ances would be He takes the 14 major reasonable excuses for times for courses and r e s c h e d u 1 i n g 0 f distributes them through

dd d · out the time slots. examinations, he a e · The schedule is rotated .

"I think the WF student . ought to be aware there each seme~~er. m an are colleges which attempt to ~am some regularly give three- sense of eqwty so the examinations in one day stu~ents and profess?rs and devote only three or won t have ~o take or give 'four days to exams. exa~s ~onsistently at the These colleges do not begm~nng. or , end of move exams. I've known ex_ammahons, Hale ~f a _DI!mber that nave Si!Id.

'

In addition, Hill said, a .22 calibei: pistol was . fowtd "fully loaded and . partially <;_oncealed" in the suspects' ¥ehicle. Attempts are being made to trace the weapon and Hill said that it is possible that the weapon may have been involved in a crime· in Los Angeles, California. The bond on the arrested individual was $700, while tbe other two men were given. a written formal trespass warning stating that - ----------~ ·. COUPON . 20t . I . . .

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I'A(it:Jo'OURFrida_t,May4,1979,0WGO~AI'iDBLACK Letters to the editor OlD GOLD AND BLACK. -.---

LYNN KNAPP CATHl:.,OODARD STACYLUKs Don't throw out the 4-Wee·k bab BETSY WAKEFIELD MARGARET KERFOOT "'

AMY JAMES ·BARB CLEARY VICTOR HASTINGS The letter in last week's Old Gold be thrown out with Uie bath water and Black by my colleague, Ralph · just fo.r a simpl,r academic Wood, deserves some careful calendar. CYNDEE MOORE CINDI IVES JANE JEFFRIES

MARY NASH KELLY llu•iru·•• Mana,co·"" RICK FEATHERS Associate Editors Assistant Editors

Wake Forest Univ,.r•ity

analysis. Mr. Wood is opposed to the I prefer death by natural cause­Winter Term and "Larkiness" in lack of faculty and student interest­particular, and toi massive bar- instead Qf by a broad scale judgment. barism in gE;!neral. The gist of his which condemns a decade, its catch argument is 'as follows: . words and a curriculum a bit too

Winston·Salem, North Carolina

Overdue 1. A winter terJJ;l (four -week) course can only be $Iccessful if it is the only course a student takes.

casually for me. Each age will have its modish phrases wrapped around educational ideals. What does one seek at Wake Forest which is an­tithetical to creativity, openness and innovation? Will the two semester system promote serio\ls studies in a more significant fashion than the spring semester with its variations?_

Some maintain that we are a great institution despite a close relationship with the Baptist State Convention. But in­stitutions, like people, are a product of their environment.

Even the staunchest Baptist critic cannot deny the influence of our Baptist heritage. Baptist is a word which cannot be separated from the university's past and should not be separated from its present.

Allowing one fifteen-week course at sity's status as a convention the same time is a venial blow to a agency. sccessful four-week course and

A trustee committee has allowing two fifteen-week courses k d l I •th · 1 would be a mortal blow. .

wor e c ose Y WI a specta 2. The winter term, an outdated subcommittee from the Council academic idea, and the catchwords The massive barbarism of any age· on Christian Higher Education to of the 1960s-'creativity', 'openness', is not going to be resisted with a redefine the relationship. and 'innovation'-arr due a decent particular curriculum or calendar. Both parties are seeki:ll.g a burial. ·,, Encouraging the imaginative

'"covenant" agreeable to each. 3. The 1960s are ov~Jr and one can capacity of the student, developing best resist the "ma&,11Ve barbarism 1 the faculty of critical analysis and

Approval hinges on the action of the age by a relJirn to serious overturning the possibility of an­of the General Board and the studies. ' attitude of eJruJathy remain worth­convention itself. Tension may 4. "Most students, and many while educational aims whether be healthy, but a definition of the faculty, who participate in the they are reached through the vehicle

like calling North Ca_rolina hbme, ,go·. cannot go unreprimanded, I to the Outer Banks m the summer, the punishment administered in the mo?Dtains in the _fall, the skL case was not only far too harsh, slopes m January. Discover Win- alli.O unfair. . . ston-salei!J'S heritage: tour Schlitz, First of all, having seen get a whiff of RJR, b~y your un- Swamp on a couple of oct~II-IBUllns, derwear from Hanes, fmd culture, have serious doubts that its Dtt~su~a not a da~e. at Old Sale!D· DC!':l't miss condition is much worSe than any the o~er10gs of the Artist Series, CU, . a num,ber of other suites or rooms· del?artl!lental lectures,. and the have seen, not e·xcluding Umve~sity T~eatre. Do m1ss the Pit .women's residences. And I have on Friday mght, Bell Brothers on found any mention of eviction g~easy nights, and Hugo's on ·Prom failing to keep rooms clean in mght: Get to know our professors, current Handbook. As far as both m and out of class, and don't concerned if the sUite had avoid on!'! just because you'll have "to: creating e~ough noise to· take a __ fmal exam. . .. _ .. __ evicted, a WJ,"itten warning sboUIII

We suppose that what \l(e really least have been issued stating want to say is, don't bother reading fact. The verb~! of an incoherent letters from nostalgic usually tend~ ~e more inftt~rn~al s~niors, nor take their words as the lack .the officialness of a Gospel truth. we gained all this warnlll:g received jrom a wisdom through experience, and we authority. urge you to do the same. You'll be In .r~sponse too el~~~!~=~~~~:: glad you did. · describmg Y~lf' n .

But that goes without saying, XT .. Swamp as . str~c~r a laildl•)rd Damn straight RL. tenant relationship, I

' any landlord would evict histen.lint.J

The Baptist State Convention nursed Wake Forest from a fledgling college to a well­

-· respected university.

new relatl'onsht'p I's long overdue. Winter Term regard \t largely as a of four-week, eleven-week, or fif· lark." _teen-week course. Itis the people on

The trustees' firm stance on . the ·structures, alive 1and kicking,: autonomo.us control reaffirms Mr. Wood's argu'»ent has con- wtm make things g_o, .

siderable merit, but tlje compromise · their • commitment to the reached by the fatuity between. The argument aboUt that four­university. The attempts to those who reject anfthi.ng but the week courses are of an: intrinsically "work in cl{)Se harmony" with two-semester lock-step, and those inferior academic . merit is a

Kim Thompson on only a 24-h?ur notice with Rebecca Lee two weeks left m their contract,

the fact that exams are fast · proaching should be an a.: rgume1nt

favor of these men against · them. T~h~e:..._.-~~-u~~:~ Active ·

• I . . ' _ .... -: .

'' .

But now the child has come of age. It's time to cut the apron strings.

Convention control is no longer beneficial to future growth. It is time to make our own decisions, set our own goals and, if need be, make our own mistakes.

The trustees have recognized

-·-· --- · who hope for a diversity of hackneyed one that ought to be Baptist leaders reaffirm their educational experiences in the 4-11· resisted. When Mr. Wood notes that commitment to the Baptist State 15 week Spring does not have much. his four week course was successful, Convention. space for a purist argument. I do I do not for a moment think that he

Severing all ties with the • · agree that intensity of fo~us in the took it ~s a lar~. Th~ quality. of 14n · d 1. k four week course was: an Important academic offermg .mheres m the

pressures durbig exam enough without the added

I would like . to take this op- finding a place to stay in one portunity to state an opposing view time, and the . uncertain concerning the opinions expressed in conditions of these men the Old Gold and Black on ~pril 20, doubtedly affect their a::~::t 1979, about the future of th,e men'Sj performance. One ot ~ : residence organizations. The at..f is now commuting to sclltQOl titudes expressed are not those of home, two hours current Central Council members or another, not so lucky was for,l!ed

c.'> the 'l,l_niversjY'_~!_II!aturity as well as its needs. In December, the board deleted from its charter provisions dealing with trustee selection and with the univer-

,_ .. ,.}

c~nvention would clou our 10 fP.ature of the 4-1·4 but I still value teacher, and the s_uccess of an wtth the pas.t. We are no longer a the array of foreign travel courses, academic venture lies it! the extel;lt small Baptist college, but our internships, independent study to which the st11.dent has enlarged his Baptist heritage is no small part projects and imaginative departures sensibility. If the four-week courses of our present stature. But not to from the standard curriculum which ar!'! of dubious aca~emi~ value, then redefine the relationship would the four wee_k term encourage~. The t~s _may be a. Sign of a lack of

. . . baby, a sprmg semester of d1verse ·VItality and seriousness of purpose· be restrtctmg our role m the educational challeng"s, should not in our academic community here. . future. - L

M:QJ!S~. GQY.emors,_ . rent public storage space for· . A brief summary of our current belongings, and sleeps outside, activities should state my case. In wherever he can finCl a place,. the last week the M.R.C. has con- seems only fair that · these ducted six activities which pertain to students should be allowed to many students on campus. Social out the semester in their rooms . events included the semi-annual raft Is this ·the way an institution race held on the Yadkin River and higher learning should treat last week's trip to Myrtle Beach. students? l think not. The men Our academic chairman presented question in thtl Swamp's eviction the 1978-79 Man-of-the-Year and. not social deViants, as would Alumnus-of-the-Year awards. House implied ~y the severity of the intramural competition concludes. taken, and so I do not think·

• l-,-

Joseph Santi Mr. Wood has set forth some tellin·g arguments, but he has.

Wake deserves student pride /overstated the case for a "return to

normalcy," With an overtenured,: · increasingly · older faculty and a student body with 'a potential for bland homogeneity, Wake Forest this week and the championship should be treated as

Pride is not a dirty word. It is important to be proud of something. It is vitally important to be proud of yourself. Pride is one of the seven sacred sins.

There is an attitude that has been flourishing during the last four years at Wake Forest University. It is an attitude that· is dangerous. It threatens to maim the spirit of the entire university. It is hard to define the attitude itself or identify its proponents, but it manifests itself in the notion that it is foolish to be proud ·of Wake Forest University.

It is an attitude of destructive criticism that flows like venom from the typewriters of responsible spokesmen for various viewpoints. It is an attitude that .. reached its zenith when a grouif ·.of students adorned the face ofthe'cloCk on Wait Chapel with a large picture of Mickey Mouse just one year ago.

These students, intelligent, thoughtful and successful members

of the university community, decided that it was fashionable to reduce their four years of study to four panels of a comic strip. No one could accuse them of pride. Everyone is entitled to their own opinion and we must defend to the death their right to sneer it. However, we-can·by no means allow ourselves to agree with it. If we are not ·proud of our university, we are not proud of ourselves and that is doubly unhealthy.

Certainly, there ~ a time for criticism. Wake Fore~ is not always right. When mistakes are made they should be pointed out by the student body and corrected. Where deficiencies exist, they should be examined by the administration and erased. But the overall attitude. in which to make these changes must be one of pride. If a ship appears to be foundering we take steps to save it. If we believe that it has already hit the bottom of the ocean, all we can do is to mourn the loss.

Let us not just criticize the critics. needs all the structures for in-Why do they feel the way they do?' novation and experimentation it can What do they find lacking in their tolerate. The sense of questioning education? Punishment. Wake and reform of the 1960s may be Forest does not punish the intellect particu~arly imp.ortant for this when it goes wrong. If the body college m the commg decades, as a strays steps are taken but if the new, hopefully less restrictive 'nrind ·~anders·;the unive~sity allows re_latl~hi~ with the Baptist con· ~-i&to steer in circles. · ·· stltuency~Wlll make our task of self-l J. · definition -~U the more significant. ' 'Perhaps this is a mistake. · '· ·

trophy will be awarded as soon as Therefore, under.the c:~~==~ the points are totaled. Other ac· I feel that these students tivities of the council included a' .restored to their rooms, or meeting with Ed Cunnings to discuss· provided with an.altematl.ve the housing problems experienced housing until the end of by, many men this year. ~e semester. possibility . of purchasing an ice . machine for the men's side of· -campus is also being considered. _ ~.,..,:-

Perhaps the humble intellectual who mocks and chides is begging to be rebutted. Here is the rebuttal. Education is what you make it. No matter how hard any university tries, it can not educate the un· willing and the task is made more difficult when those that are un­willing also happen to be very in­telligent. And it is a tragedy when an intelligent student resists, then defames the university he

ex~~:;:pr:;seth!Y ~~~~tit::;::: .Eiedions:i; Don Schoonmaker, members of the Central Council and

Assoc. Pro,essor the new House Governors. I am. The recent Student Government

frustrates. Pride is not a dirty word. It is a

virtue. Be proud of Wake Forest. Be proud of yourself for being here.

In parting looking forward to working with -elections, as well as past ones, them in expanding the current -illustrate the much needed attention M.R.C. program next year. these proceedings lack. The campus

election process . has been in· Some say there are things that are Michael C. Whitehurst '80: creasingly marked by , poor

best left unsaid. We disagree. As _ M.R.C. Preside~~ organization, ambiguous policies two graduating seniors, we have and some deliberate violations. been trying to make a 'statement The largest problem probablY lies about our Wake Forest experiences, Ch 1 f · · with the poll workers, Who in the last but our liberal arts education has ape ame minute persuasion to help out, are made us incapable of focusing upon . not fu~l¥. _instructed ·in · their any -single event. Kim might tell In reviewing your article in last responsibilities. In the last election, about the daiquiri party she hosted week's OG&B about Wait Chapel, we pon . workers were .not only in­in a Tribble elevator sophomore_ noticed that you failed to mention_ c~ns~t!'!nt ca~pUS·Wide, but. ~ISo Deborah Win d year. Meanwhile, Rebecca .could tell one of the highlights of the chapel's Within mdividualdormson·who were

_________ e..='fJ.::;_'IJ_r,_ you about inviting nine people home history. For a brief. period of time _permitted to vote. The re~ult was

0 for the Derby. However, these in· .last April, the steeple clock was one: ,that some who were eligible to vote t • • I d • cidents are only good for stories at of the largest Mickey Mouse clocks , were not. allowed to. Poll wor.kers u going senior eaves a VICe future Homecomings. d . in the'world Before the 1~foot-tall· are not informed as to ,what they What we would like to o is to warn Mouse could be removed by the mar ~r ~ay not tell voters. Even the

. Among the grafitti littering a and from soci~tl.es and fraternities :·-- hbrary desk, I recently saw a to BSU~ There are a host of others

question which profoundly disturbed · which are too numerous to list in this me. It read: "Does life begin after short column. Wake Forest?" Involvement in any one of these

. . . . underclassmen not to waste any of maintenance department it was verification poli~y has been so ava1lable m the umver~1ty at- .their time here, either by putting observed by news reporters and po«?rly ·explained, at least one mosphere. And_ those ~ho fmd they valuable energy into futile \lfforts or photographed The photograph of legiS~ator this year explained his cannot make bme to hv_e at _Wake by avoiding opportunities for the Micke Mouse clock, and the election success to the failure of ~e Forest and are expectmg life to growth. Taking philosophy fresh· . Y. rti le was sent out poll workers to notice several of his

The sad f!lct is that many a WF u.:-ganizations offers new friendships undergrad, m an effort to make the and a chance to channel one's in· grad~s believed to be requisite to terests in hitherto unimagined adm1tt!lnce to graduate a_nd directions. In addition to "looking professwnal schools or to. the JOb good on one's record,'' many ac­ma:k~t, _foreg?es the r1ch and tivities offer valuable future job fulflilmg life which can take place at . experience. But beyond this, in· Wake Forest. , There are many volvement carries the student far othe~s, caring for little besides be!'!r, beyond the perimeters of Wake parties and dates, who do not denve Forest. This does not necessarily the f~tll satisfaction possible from mean physical movement, although WF hfe. often it does. Rather involvement

The complaint is often levied by stimulates the mind' to think of those who believe that one must wait matters which concern a much until graduation d~y ~o begin life, wider spectrum of life than that that Wake Forest 1s tsolated. And which ~oes on at Wake Forest. this complaint contains a fragment of truth. To ·know what is happening beyond the hallowed bricks of this campus, one must make a sincere effort. But news subscriptions are relatively inexpensive and easily attainable and Winston-Salem is only five minutes away.

ln addition, the restrictive social codes have an isola til effect in that they separate the ale side of campus from th~·~fe ale side and mitigate against ttfe-growth of male­fern ale friendships which could r:nable one sex to perceive if not to r:11mprehend the psychology of the ot.hcr.

. N(:vcrthcless the opportunities for. living and for discovering and ex­pt·rir:nc:ing life abound at Wake I· r,rr·~t. One has only to reach out ;wd v.r;rsp.

H•·r·:!IJ~t: Wake Forest has a u·J;rf 1°/l·ly small student body and q,,., •· :m· a multitude of activities ,,,u, whH:h a student can'become ,, ,,,J·tt·d; t.he potential for in­, ... ,·, ;,,,.ut. is tremendous. These

.. • ''""'"''' run the gamut from the ,,,,, ,,,,ltl und Black to ice ·hockey, ', '"" :It mlt•nt G nvernment to choir

A muititude of organizations is not '·all that Wake Forest has to offer for the student seeking to broaden his horizons. In addition, cultural and intellectual opportunities abound. The Artists Series does an excellent job of bringing talented and renowned artists to campus. These artists come from abroad as well as from the United States. Also through th~ various departments: College Umon, Challenge, the dif­ferent lecture series, scholars politicians and journalists beyond comparison have come to Wake. One does not always have to agree with their viewpoints but the experience of personally hearing and meeting such figures as Jimmy Carter and ;. Bob Dole, George Will and an East German diplomat are not to be forgotten.

It is true tl:at there are only twenty-four hour~ m a day and there often is not time enough to ac­

: complish everything desired with this time. But as it has been said · " d • one oesn't have time, one makes ti~e" to grasp all oooortunities·

. 11 1 . . 1 . . aecompanymg a c , f . d , ted ting . mag1ca y unfur 1ts mamfest co ors men year 1s an example of the ftrst;. by the Associated Press wire service rien s repea vo • to them upon receiving a diploma deciding against a semester in Spain and published by newspapers As a former legislator and poll are sadly mistaken. in order to see our football games is throu bout the country Thl! action worker, I can understand many of

For life continues and goes on at an example of the latter. by s:me light-heart~d students· the.~roblems resulting from trying Wake Forest even though there are Then again, our real purpose is to raised Wait Chapel to a level of to find enough poll workers. Many of those who ignore it in pursuit of encouragethoseofyouwhowillstay nationwide prominence"which has these prob~ems, however, cotild ~ studies and parties. For it will to take advantage of eyery op- been surpassed oilly by various, over~ome if SG would not wait un always be easy to get caught up in portunity that Wake Fore!~!. has to ·dignitaries who visited the chapel. election eve t«? find these workers. the rat race, and to put off living for offer, academic and otherwise (we ·- - ····---·· - · Another senous problem of ~e another day. ~et into "otherwise"). If you would The .Mickey Mouse orCthe chapef election ~rocess is the omission m

BY NIX

''rHEIUf A~E TWo 71-I/NGS I CAN'r .STAND ,AQour TillS .Sc#t:XU .. y

ANt> rHEY'I'?e .tl.el:tf RIGHT IN r~O/-Ir Or ,A-flf / "'

· clock has become a legend not only the constitution and by-laws of the at ·wake Forest, but throughout powers of the elections committee. North Carolina. Students· at Duke Nowhere ·does it empower :University attempted to equal the member of the elections Committee feat, but were unable to reach their to grant ~xtension for petitions,. yet chapel clock and were forced to. extensions have been made without settle for a large dormitory clock. any approved guidelines as to who ,The officials at Duke proved to be may approve them and under what! more open-minded than their· conditions they may be made. Joi counterparts at Wake and permitted ·assume that an extension does not the figure to remain for a few days.' affect- others on the ballot would· be Pe~hllps in the future, some Wake making a serious misjudgement.' Forest students will surpass the; The elections committee and the spirit of Mickey Mouse, as Wait legisl~ture n~e.d to formalize •ap­Chapel remains a symbol of the propriate policies and adol)t . them ,campus humor that still exists at into the by-laws.. . . Wake Forest University. Finally, the student government

should better inform the stuaent THE MOUSE~TEER& body of the election process. Write­

in candidacies, and particularly the voting process are grossly ' misun­derstood by many students. !\lore care is needed-in conducting these elections in the future and I hope the · new .SG administration will learn from . the last. election and try to remedy these problems.

Eviction After reading about the almost

total eviction of an entire suite, knOwn. as the "Swamp,"· from Poteat House, i admit my disbelief. Although I realize that continued · .misco~duct in the dormitories

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IS overmneni )ast. ones, ii attention heeampus been ln· by. poor 1s policies ations. obablyHes dnthe lp out, are 'in ·their at eleeUctn, , only

but_ i1·whowere result was .ble to vote :tl WQ:r._kers what they I. Even the

been so least one 1lained his ilui'e of the reral of his

r and poll d many of rom trying 'S. Many of ·, coUld be t wait until e workers. em of the tmission in aws of the ~ommittee. 10wer any Committee titions,. yet de without as to who

mderwhatl made. Tol

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overn.ment 1e stuaent ess. Write­cularly the sly- misun· mts. More ~ting these I I hope the· will learn ind try to

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G.·Dale Neal

'beer Hunter' emphasizes rituals VietnJlm was the flrst Home," and Francis 1972. i! lin his cathedral wor; a mine and his buddyj · domness of the dea·dl~

movie 'war fought in Ford Coppola's' · an- Cimino uses the classic smpping the one shot thab behind lose all his limbd game, while Stephen aif, America. While the · ticipated "Apocalypse epic form, beginning with -w1~ echo through the :Prisoners playinj ~ick, (Christophft, casualty counts added up Now." In a formal a. wedding and ending film. ; Russian roulette .we~ ~aiken) s~udder befofe behind Walter Cronkite. ceremony, a cancer With a funeral. The, . After the hunt we are never documented m t4.~ 1t. · every night '-after dinner, ri!lden Jphn . Wayne opening hour of "The- ~hisked away by th~. war, but Cimino h! After thefr escatt!, we could only see John ~anded over the Oscar, Dee~ J!unter." with ~he! silund of helicopters intp addressed War! not ju · Nick .winds u~ in a Sai·g~ w'aynlj and the Green hkr a sword, to the ethmc Ukraman weddmg the green nightmare of· Vietnam, w1th . hosp1tal w1th b · Berets halting the director and picture of too consciously recalls Vietnam,intotheritualof metaphor. The incredib unravelled nerves. f dominoes. While the 1979, Michael Cimino and the other American epic, war. The three men ar; anxiety generated in t doctor asks him about ~

· jungle burst in tracer fire "The Deer Hunter,'~ Coppola's "Godfather" P.O.W.s forced to pla~ viewer--not knowing if Ukranian name, "lsnt ' past the camera's eye, probably the finest films. Stephen, (.John Russian roulette by their the screen will explode in· that Russian?" "No, it's

while "Life" American film of the Savage)ismarriedinthe Nyrth Vietnames~ bloodandsmokingbrains American."ButNiekhas photographed the decade. best traditions of his catJtors. In a film heav'y; or just another click Of losthisAmericanritualS.. Oriental bodies sprawled Vietnam was not fought town,_ on the eve of his., in sym.olism, Cimillo has. the soundtrack-will nat When asked, he can like stunti'nen at My Lai, in the>hearts and minds of departure with his tw~ found · the working let him confuse war wU"' barely remember his we were still fighting the lhr Vietnamese but in pals for the war. But th~t metaphor for war in the playacting,· bodies Y4IJi mother's name.

'lnjungs and the Japs and those of Americans. long standing rituals do. Russian roulette: the one stuntmen. •:··.. Shattered by his ex-<the Jeries. Mekong Delta Vietnam was but a little ,$tev!e no good; he .will be loaded chamber in six, Michael, with his rifiu~ perience, ~ick turns ~ equalled Fort Apache. 'hellhole half way around commg home wtth no. the random violence that of the one shot hunt, the only rttual he ca'l

The movies that fed us the world that siphoned legs: · hilS one gambles .on the tiiD.• rllfllember; the RussiaO our images before the off the legendary Mu·hael, (Robert De rdulette. He becomes atr war, that coh.fused our A?Jl~rican energy. Thus r;Iir~) provides. tfle ritual· Exam Schedule addict to the game, thA perception during, now C1mmo's "Deer Hunter" hnkmg American wed· war. and the drugs. ;t unmask the inscrutable takes most of its place in dings and Vietnarq_ 9-12A.M. 2·SP.M. Michael is the only o~ Vietnam for us. a Pennsylvania steel . funerals in his obsessiv~ MAY · tgcome back whole; onl

Four years after the town, with only a few · 'deer hunting. The onl~ 8 TUESDAY 2 MWF 8 MWF ~If of Stephen is shipp transformation of Saigon scenes in Vietnam, ac· good kill is the buck taken 9 WEDNESDAY 9:30 TI · 1:30 'IT lillme. Michael faced all'

· into Ho Chi Minh City, the tually shot in Thailand. In with one shot through the 11 FRIDAy n MWF 8 'IT tfie rituals and surviveil: movie war has been al three-hour epic of the heart. While Michae• READINGDAY Returning to Saigon for surrendered with a ·rash lo'ss of American in- scampers across th~ 12 SATURDAY 9 MWF 3 'IT Nick the deer huntljr of releases: "Tae Boys nocence, Cimino follows1 panorljmic mountain~, 14 MONDAY 10 l\IWF

3 MWF cann~t save Nick. Tl1e

From Company C," threl! young men from the Greek Orthodox choi.J? 15 TUESDAY 1 MWF 4:30 TI MATH one shot Michael refused r'Who'll Stop The Rain?" their hometown to the from the wedding sings i.tl on his last hunt crashQ¥ the benedictory "Coming last stages of the war in' tqe background. M~ehadl 16 WEDNESDAY· 12 WF 12 TI tftrough Nick's skull \d

t~e final game between tlie two men.

• '"The Deer Hunter" closes with another ritual, the America' funeral, ~tephen in thff, wheelchair, Michael i~ the, pro~;riform, Nic~ in rthe c ... The singini of'God ~ss America,» which jas• \lrawn critic a. fire af'too·naive, is not a ·

. ~mpty . click, but . sink ~omf; tb the .!heart. "Th · .Deed Hunter" is a ra film that cari wound deeply as the lights 'go UJ?; ripping holes in our consciousness of the war, the movies, and o'Y· selves. 1·

Staff pnolo by Scott Gerding

Living wood The annual Student Art Exhibition Is on display

from 10. a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. on weekends untO May 18 in the Fine Arts Center.

FESTIVAL ·- Winston-Salem's Mayfest festival will be held Saturday from 11 a.m. • 5 p.m. downtown.

CONCERT·· The Pointer Sisters will present a concert on Tuesday, May 15, at 8 p.m. in the Greensboro Auditorium.

CU FLICKS·- "The Cheap Detective" at 7, 9 ·and 11 p.m. Friday through Sunday in DeTamble Auditorium; "The Barefoot Executive," Mon­day at '1 p.m.; "The Monkey's Uncle," Monday at 9 p.m. "The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh," Tuesday at 7 p.m.; "Swiss Family Robinson," Tuesday at 9 p.m.; "Bambi," Wednesday at 7, 9 and 11 p.m.; "Blackbeard's Ghost," Thursday at 7 p.m.; "Treasure Island," Thursday at 9 p.m.; "The Absent Minded Professor.''

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Future uric lear for JohnsOn by Karin Aritien football and baseball," categories. He :was MvP schooll thought of maybe Johnson's future; is

· s..rrwr~... said Johnson. "As far as for the team and was on signing with, a~_pro team currently up in the air •.. For seniors it is finally academics go, I couldn't the second team all-ACC. and not graduating '' He's now waiting to see if_

time for that long awaited handle both. I decided on In his sophomore ye~r, admitted Johnson. "B~t he will be drafted. "If not, graduation; the waiting Wake because when they Johnson batt,ed .300 ·as since I didn't have a good I don't know what I'll be is almost over. For Stan recruited me they said I Wake .won _the ACC year and didn't get the· doing." He is also Johnson, however, the could be a starter as a champ1onsh1p.- money, I decided not to waiting, with the. rest of ·waiting has just begun. freshman. Also, since "My junior year· was sign. ·After my junior the Wake Forest baseball His future with the Wake Coach Crater had been a my. worst year. I didn't year, I went to summer_ team, to bear if Wake will. Forest baseball team will catcher for the Yankees, have the type of year 1 school to try to graduate, be in the NCAA 'tour· be determined next week I thought he would be was expecting and ·_after not signing."· '. nament. with the announcement of able to help me out; neither did the_ team," "MY. senior year I've NCAA bids and his future knowing the tricks of the Johnson commented. "I had .a good . season,. with the sport of baseball trade of catching. didn't play up to my probably as good a year itself will be determined "I had my best year pote~tial." Even: though as I ever had- ~efensively

"Probably ;only one ·other team from the East will be·· chosen· ··and Georgia Southern· and· Virginia Tech both .bad

in early June, with the here as a freshman," he he had a bad year, he was and I hit the ball better ann o u n c em en t of added. During that year drafted by the Cincinnati than I have since my professional baseball Johnson hit .348 and led Reds. · freshman y,e a r·, draft picks. - the team in five "When I first came to averaging .333," he 'said. . good years," ·offered~

Baseball has been a way of life for catcher Stan Johnson of Wilson, North Carolina. Having grown. up near a stadium, Johnson started his baseball career in Little League and continued to play in both junior and senior ,high school, before completing the circuit here at Wake.

Johnson. '

••. glass of the fin~st •••

Trials and tribulations· . I . . .'"

by Kevin Nelson Sports Edhor

The 1978-1979 . sports season at Wake Forest is ~ne that will be remembered more for its activities in the court­room than on the playing field. And perhaps it's just as well. There are more memories in a Ron Roberts or a Larry Harrison controversy than in a 1-10 or 1~·15

law suit against the been mysterious thus far from state, 3·2 and 3-2 in a university for breach of ·concerning the actions it pair of classic victories to contract. · · . will take, disclosures that end the season. Wake now

Basketball season Harrison's· mother ap· awaits an NCAA bid, brought with it hopes of parently paid for his car which . may or may . not_ something to root for. with_ a loan, and.that the arrive despite its final28-Despite the departure of car was not purchased 9 inark .. Rod Griffin and Leroy from a local dealer have . · · The golfers were MacDonald, four fresh-· cast doubts on the· equally successful a·s men, Frank Johnson and validity of Ms. Rikard's they won their twelfth Larry Harrison. stirred charges. conference title in thir-suggestions of the Instead. of the op- teen tries in the ACC · previous year's young timistic hoopla which Tournament, despite Duke squad. accompanied football and what could be termed an -' .. ~;··~ I'" .

~.~:;.. l.oo ng ahead ~"llll~oby~Wehon .. . , Senior catcher Stan Johnson, a starter for four years, can now only walt for ~ .. ~, word from the NCAA and the professional draft.

During his high school years, he had given greater consideration to · college football since he was an all-East quar­terback his senior year. He changed that decision in the spring of his senior year, however, when he hit .527 to lead the state and was an All-State selection.

When deciding on a college, Johnson con­sidered many schools. "Most ACC schools wanted me to play

season .. Football arrived at

Wake Forest last fall with a new breath of optimism which accompanied new head coach John Mackovic's arrival. Mackovic promised an exciting brand of football to accompany the changeover from Chuck Mills' "one-yard and a cloud of dust" strategy.

In a situation similar to basketball, the base};)all underdog's role against the football team's, team was sublime in its Carolina, which was however, expectations. promises for the season. ranked second .in the were not fulfilled. The This . was to be a· nation .. With the NCAA

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Virginia was the first victim of Mackovic's new passing strategy in a 14-0 vi~tory. Unfortunately the Wahoos were the only team to fall to . the Deacons as Wake chalked up it's second straight 1-10 season.

While M~icltovic's team did man age to produce the excitement that Mills' teams lacked, Mills provided fireworks of rus! own off the field with

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fledgling Deacs began rebuilding year for a- tournament on the their season with a relatively young team Deacon home course at horrendous· showing in according to coach Bermuda Run later this the Big Four against 'Marvin Crater, . month, Jesse Haddock Carolina. Fortunately With the improvement- may walk away with his things got better,· of pitchers Warren third national cham-especially the back-to- Newton and Jimmy pionship. . back victories over Doherty, however, and Ron Roberts will be one · Maryland and the Heels the arrival of frosh hurler person who would just as in conference games, but Frank Warner, Crater soon see Haddock and his· the squad never appeared had a good pitching staff . Deacs fall Oat at the . to jell en route to a . to accompany his nationals. Roberts began mediocre 13·15 season. characteristically strong round three of the Wake

The biggest news story corps of hitters, led by Forest legal merry-go-in basketball · was not . converted pitcher Chris round last year when he about the team, but why. Hurd and veteran Stan filed a near 'half · a it was at Wake. Trustee Johnson. million dollar suit against James Gilley's secretary, The Diamond Deacs Haddock, Wake, and June Rikard charged in a finished second in the athletic director Gene deposition that Gilley had ACC with a 9-3 record. Hooks for what , be channelled money to They stumbled once, in deemed improper doings Larry Harrison for the. losses to in his firing in December purch'ase of1a car. Davidson, of 1977. ' ·

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·.Spring BrE tans, near

. , were- sc: compete ir

: ·-. and wome1 'bx sundow1 only six of still had a ' two campul

Men's pi got under1 with eight < games. E .remained .i<

In first action·, tb' downed the the Thund thundered p

CoiJ (cont' fro Despite

failures of athletic tea Forest fan optimistic.

Mackovic of his s,qu: year which, never lost enthusiasrr recruiting y blue chip Brent Offen slew of behemoth" combined VI return of x James 1 legitimizes · that the fc expresses recent failu;

Likewise, Tacy has rE forward to In addition

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an.t l'hil llrkhnl\ humli:~lt•,llht•.SI·~mn·Chi ddt•nt Sig Ep "D" 12·8 . ... rn<~~r•• "II" squad 17-1 and the 'l'lw High Knees

\\"hilt• )·,,u sit lwn• Cards slippl•d · by the t•stablishcd themselves l't•adin~ this. lht• l.'ampus Pot<'al Hi-men 4·2. In as th<' Cind<'rclla team by

· . l'h;ml pionships in in· other Monday games Si~ knockinl'( off Tau Eta Mu

PAGE SEVEN Friday, May 4,1979, OLDGOW AND BLACK

Soccer team begins practice .coach pleased, with progress

by George Minot Aasoclale Sporta EclltDJ

we can really get a good soccer program going. tramural · softball may Ep "D" used an eighth 12-8 and Pika "A" bested

_. already have bee.n inning rally to defeat Theta Chi "B" 13·2.' The r, decided.- Regardless of . PAD "A" 11-9, the High Sigma Chi "A" .. team ; . the outcome, however, Knees. defeated ~appa · ·stopp~d the ·Express 18-4.

The world's . most popular sport has· finally · achieved varsity status at WFU, but for new soccer coach George Kennedy, the work is really just

There are a lot of good athletes in the. program and I think we have a

posted the amazing record of 156·41-10 . ..'\long with the head·· c(lach position at W~k~, Kennedy will also w~tk m the Sports lnfor~~tion the situation is the same· Sig ·~A" 1o-4;··plka ·'-'At.._ ·With· the men's field

. 1 as that of ·the cham· triumphed over the narrowed · to eight by pionship drive in n~arly ·Herefords 6-3 and the Wednesday afternoon, every sport. Sigma Chi "A". nine the action became more .

When the season needed as many inmngs intense. The Pika. "A' ·started on the ·heels of to edge the Meat· Whistles club edged the Sigma Chi

.. Spring Break .and sun- 14-13: "A" squad by a 1-0 score, tans, nearly 92 teams Tuesday's second and the Deke "A" team were. · scheduled· to round sessions got all came from eight runs

beginning_ · The Deacs .have been

working out the last two

compete in both men's · teams into the act and the behind, tQ eliminate the ; . ·,and women's play. ~ut subsequent p 1 a Y Thundering Herd 9·8. The

by sundown Wednesday,· narrowed the number of Derelicts needed a one only six of.those teams men's teams to eight. In· out, bases loaded single still had a chance ·at the those games the top· in the.last of the seventh two campus titles. seeded Deke "A"· team to down the ·cards 10·9

· weeks and on Wed· ~esday, Wake played their first scrimmage game .under their new coach--and promptly lost 4·1 to "The Storm." The loss did not dampen the enthusiasm of 'Kennedy, however.

./

Men's playoff a·ction trounced the All Balls 11· and the High Knees broke got underway Monday · 0, the Thundering Herd a 3·3 seventh inning with eight opening round . downed the previously stalemate with a six run games. Eight te·ams unbeaten Tail of Spence r:ally to overcome the .remained .idll~·w)th byes.. 16-1, the Derelicts ousted Tumbling Dice 9-5 and

In first rourld men's. . the · Galileans·- 12·9, and narrow the field to four. action the All Balls the Cards defeated the In the women's drive downed the Yankees 3-o,. Stones 13-1.' The Davis for the championship, the Thundering Herd Tumbling Dice. came Johnson's Babies thundered past Deke "B" from an 8-4 deficit in the powdered the Strings 14·3

Courts and courts and the Steps tamed Animal Hall 16·4 in Wednesday's semi-final action. ·

"' '· ~ ·ll

Despite the efforts of third baseman John GUdea, Tau Eta Mu was defeated by the High-Knees 12·8 In Intramurlal softbaU competition. Tau .Eta Mu, previously undefeated, was only one of several top­seeded teams to faD In the early rounds of the softball play-offs.

"I was actually pretty pleased with the practice game considering everything," said Ken­nedy. ~·we had only been working together for a little while and it takes time to build a good team.

(cont' from page six) returning "seasoned" Despite the relative sophomores Tacy now

failures of this season's has a poirit guard in athletic teams, the Wake recruit Kenny Vaughns,

Restores team hopes

"I'm really looking forward to building ' a tradition here at Wake Forest," continued Kennedy. "Every other spot has. established· a nice tradition and I think

Forest fan remains ever wno may allow Frank optimistic. . Johnson to return to his

Mackovic returns most natural position at of his s,quad from last shooting guard. . cum bed to Andrews 6-3, 7·6 and Molino disJ)osed of year which, importantly, The realization that s..rrw.;,., McDonald in the other semifinal match, 6-3, 6-3. never lost its pride or . courtroom cases ob- For ·Armand Molino and the Wake Forest men's State clinched a tie for first on. Sunday morning enthusiasm. A good scured · playing field tennis team, 1979 has been a season of shattered when McDonald beat Avram in the third place singles recruiting year, paced by action this season at dreams. This past weekend's results at the Big Four match, 6·3, 6·1. blue chip quarterback Wake Forest is a fact tol.!l'nament in Greensboro (Wake 2nd, and Molino the In a seesaw match, Molino took the singles title over Brent Offenbecher and a which must be attributed singles champ), went a long way towards restoring Andrews, 6·3, o-6, s-o. "I kind of fell asleep in the slew of 270-pound as much to the teams' those dreams for next year. d ' I d'dn' 1 it both behemoth-.' linemen, overalllackofsuccessas secondset,"sai Molino, 'but 1 t et erme combined with the final much as the school's It was apparent from the outset that it was going to in the third. I'm so happy to win: Finally, I played a return of running back apparent ability to at· be' a two team tournament as both State and Wake tournament one match at ·a time instead of looking J a m e s M c Doug a 1 d tract trouble. captured the first round singles matches. In the ·head." legitimizes the optimism Such an· affinity for morning Avram topped Ray Disco of Carolina, 6-4, 7-5 State won the overall title, however, when Wake fell that the football team controversy, Dr. David and Andy Andrews of State defeated Duke's Ruby to Carolina in the third place-doubles; 6-3, 5-7, 1o-8.1t expresses despite its Hadley of the History Porges, 3·6, i.i-2, 6-3. Later that day, Matt McDonald of was the most exciting match of the tournament and it recent failures. Department recently State survived a tough match with Carolina's Gary featured some brilliant shot making. The third set

Likewise, coach· Carl suggested to one jour· Taxman, 6-3, 4-6, 6-3, and Molino handled Dave looked like it would never end until Carolina broke Tacy has reason to look nalist, may turn Wake uk forward to next season. sportswriters into court Robinson of D e 6·3, 6-3. Molino's serve in the 17th game. Taxman then held In addition to the four reporters. The semifinals ~till left nothing to choose between serve an the Heels secured their only victory of the

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pretty good nucleus in which to build."

Kennedy's infectious enthusiasm has already rubbed off on his players. 27 athletes worked out with Kennedy these past

, two weeks and the former Belmont ' Attey mentor was pleased with their effort.

"I know that it is exam time around here and I. was very impressed that so many men came out and were willing to put in the time," Kennedy said.

Kennedy is already working hard to develop the essential rapport with his players that is .necessary to build a winning program. C.omm uting from Belmont, which is near Charlotte, Kennedy will visit each player in his dorm room to talk with him about summer ·workouts and the coming 1979 season.

Kennedy has always had good communication with his athletes and it

· has paid off in the win column. At Belmont Abbey, Kennedy's teams compiled a 24·11 mark in two seasons and in 1978, they finished second in the district, losing to Clemson on a fluke goal with two minutes left, 1-0.

He has worked with the U.S. Olympic team tryouts and the Tampa Bay Rowdies of the NASL. In ten years of coaching at the prep level, Kennedy has

department. 1 Wake will not officj.ally

move into · va!JsitY competition untii tbeJI.980 season; the '79 squ·~.·~wi.ll work out and, pla as many "e li;hi.J:Ji ion

§~~fa~;hip3ss a~f~~~~· schedule will startin the· fall of '80.

The 1980 season could be a tough one for the young Deacs as they will probably take an upex· perienced team into!';he tough ACC--a confer~ce that includes ~~he perennial. powerhTse Clemson T1gers. . ,; .

Clemson, with its Jess than stringent acadeptic requirements-and th~t .is putting it mildly--is ~ble to recruit anybody fr,om anywhere. Consequen~ly, the Tigers resemble~ an African-Brazilian WQrld Cup team, and with Sjlch stars as Filbert Baji and Baji Filbert--the names have been changed. to protect the ignora.JJt-­Clemson remains 1he New York Cosmos of the ACC--partically invin­cible.

Kennedy. enjoys playing tea ins the caliber of Clemson, however, ,~d when '80 rolls around e thinks Wake will e ready. I

With George Kennt ' at the helm, the W e Forest soccer progr looks to be on solid ground.

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Testing yields insight b.v Cyndee Moore

AsSOc1aln Ed1lor

It is one of those gorgeous, mid-70 spring afternoons; the sun decks (Ire crowded, pick-up

·softball, golf and frisbees . are turning up all over campus, but seniors spend the afternoon testing.

The afternoon will actually be part of a "valuable and important 'program," according to Brian Austin, director of psychological services and administrator of senior testing. : ·senior testing, or the Undergraduate Record Examination (URE), in the subject matter field is equivalent to the

Institution and its graduates.

Secondly, and perhaps most . significantly, the 'Cat a provides each department with in­formation which is helpful in evaluating its curriculum, Austin said.

Each departmental test is divided into categories. For example, if students consecutively perform poorly on the perception section in the psychology departmental test, then, perhaps, the department has not offered enough courses in that area.

discipline," he added. Each senior is en­

couraged to review his results with his advisor. Along with their correct answers in each URE category, students are given their SAT scores, their grade point ,averages and class tanks.

Although departments are aware of their majors' performance in each category, they do not use the URE as a basis for their entire curriculum. Neither are seniors drilled or prepared in any way for senior testing.

/

Village returns profits by Melanie Welch

Storr Wri••• The landlord and the

tenants alie both "very well pleased" with the success of the jredevelopment of 'Reynolda Village.

Both aims of the university have been realized reported Charles M. Allen, professor of biology and chairman af the Reynolda Village committee. The Village itself has been restored and, at the same time, it is also bringing . in revenuE\ to the university.

ment, $100,000 of which ,was received from . the Babcock Foundation. ·

Williard specifically said the investment gives "diversity to the whole endowment portfolio." Everything new is not invested in stocks and bonds, he said.

Paul _ S. McGill, manager of both Reynolda Village and Gardens, · says he has been actively seeking a · tenant mix. He has had a special interest in getting shops for the students since Reynolpa Village is owned by the university.

.more people, especially those who would not usually go to a store of this type, have come in tO browse. The clientele includes a great many students.

Also located in the Cattleshed, the Athletic Attic is the source of equipment for the many joggers of the WF. community. Business is · · reported a·s. being gOod with niany students not only buying but working there.

Graduate Record Examinations (GRE) in the subject matter field.

Wake Forest is one of 260 universities which participates in the URE program. The university has maintained a 67-70 percentile ranking compared with the other universities throughout the past four years.

Thirdly, · the data provides the senior with an evaluation of his past four years in comparison with the performance of people in his or her own class and with a national liample of students in his d~scipline.

"Tests m,ay not really be indicative of what a student knows," said Robert Shorter, chair­JUan of the English department.

Stan pllo!O by Tam Gwyn

A mall placard heralds the new shops that mark the restoration of Reynolda Village.

John G. Williard, vice­president and treasurer, said the restoration was "worth the investment" and will be a "fair return."-Wake Forest has invested approximately $500,000 in the develop-

He added, however; that the Village could not be totally viable if all th~ stores were student oriented sirlce studfnts generally are neifber here year round nor spend vast · sums of

·· Perhaps the most popular part of · the Cattleshed renovation has been the new Atrium Restaurant. ~ecaQJJe the re,stauranf ~~ geared .mostly tli students, the manager says he was scared students would not come to try it out since some of the stores in the Cat• tleshell do carry ex·-· pensive items. However, ~e says he "can't com­plain" because the operation has been very successful.

• All departmental scores are the con­fidential knowledge of each department, 'Mullen and Wilson said. Sup­posedly, no department has knowledge of another's performance, and the URE is not an ·attempt to encourage intramural competition between departments.

Magazine varies genre money.

McGill cited one problem as the main- .. tenance expense of the aged and custom-made

. buildings.

URE data provides a three-fold service to the university. Firh, both Dean of the College Thomas E. Mullen and Provost Edwin G. Wilson use' the data on a broad scope to evaluate the overall., quality of the

"When 60 percent or higher of your majors are double majors, you are eroding the performance pf majors in each

The 72 page summer edition of "The Student," Wake Forest's art and literary magazine, will be Qistributed Monday at the mformation desk and at New Dorm, according to editor Ruth Zultner.

The magazine contains an interview with novelist William Styron, author of "The Confessions of Nat Turner," discussing his

new book "Sophie's Choice," which will be published· this June.

Interviews with The New tork Times columnist Russell Baker and American playwright Edward Albee will be featured a'long with short stories, poetry, essays and photographs by students. ·

Zultner said_ the

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'magazine is of such section of photographs by ;yariety that she feels Stephen Tippie, an arti~le ... anyone who picks it up 'by Brett R1ggs on the stde will want to read at least effects pf eating moun­two or three pieces from tain oysters, an article on start to finish." . football by Andy Young · Although this is one of and the first nude cover

the biggest issues of "The in the history of the Student," it is not the magazine. most expensive, Zuitner Elizabeth Russell added. As in the winter Wakefield's short ttory, issue, the staff did most "A Jesus Face in the of the layout. and Window," winner of the production work for "The D. A. B-rown Award and ~tudent" in order to save Kenneth Pritchard's money and learn more poem· "Grimes," co­about putting together a winner of the American magazine. Academy of Poets prize, . Other special· features will also be included in include a "Gallery" lhe issue. hY.Ytl'ti'.Y.•ri\IY'.·a•tl'a•••.-.•.•.·.-.·.•.·.•a•a•a•a•N.-rl'a•a•l'•••••••

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', This does not appear to be a deterring factor since there is 100 percent accupancy. Tenants have ev.,en been turned away.

The Villag~ cannot expand physically due to· ,an agreement with the Foundation to use oJl}y the original buildings.

Friends of the Earth, a natural health foods store, has been in operation for seven years. Although it was not profitable at business is very now. Since other hav&.oooned recently

The lunch customers tend to be business people; early evening, WF students; ·and later­on in the evening, local residents and professors.

Everyone involved with Reynolda Village is reaping the benefits of its \Jniqueness in ar­chitecture and location.

·Not only are students enjoying having these-off­campus spots within· wa.lking distance, but 't .. e Village itself is becoming

a fashionable place

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MAY 8 THRU MAY 18 'HOURS: MONDAY .. FRIDAY 10·12 A.M.: 1-5 P.M.: SAT. 9 A.M.· 12:30 P.M.

The Natural Life History of A Text Book

The tnt book is a unique animal in the world of books. ·

It is many things to many people.

It comes off the presses a robust and happy Want, adored by i1.s author and praised to the skies by Its nublisher. ·

It was conceived of Scholarship and Patience and nurtured by Effort. However, its future is breif and full of ups and downs.

As an infant, it's worth its wel8ht in diamonds, but the day comes quick when the publisher won't give a dime for his own offspring!

Spanking new, th!.s infant's price outrages students who buy it over the counter.

The new baby matures fast in a world of hard knocks. By turns, it Is uaed and misused. It is handled and mishandled. It Is talked about, talked over, talked up and talked down.

By turns,it is a friend and a foe. It is taken to dinn~ and kept up all night. It gets picked up, pattf.d and prai!ed. ~t gets dlscusaed. (·ussed, and kicked across the room.

It gets dog-eared and dog-tired. IL gets rained on and sat on. It is thwnbed through and flipped through and flopped over.

It knows many owners. It is bickered over, bargained for, derided and disowned.

And its short wthappy end comes when the book buyer announces a new baby brother back at the publisher with a birth_ mark that reads "New Edition," or "The Book Will No Lon(ler Be Used On Campus."

What we can pay for your books is determined by the demand for that title, elsewhere and by the condition of the book and if and when it will be adopted again on this campus.

General Information

Please be advised that the Bookstore baa NO OONTROL WHATSOEVER o,. tb1 Will (adoption) of textbooks! Each Academic Department and .Or Profeaor il FREE to clec:ide on the books to be used. Publishers control new ediUons and 11t pica. Wholilele Book Dealers set prices on books not .n use here! Not the Boollltore! Be ASSURED we will BUY your BOOKS at the HIGHEST possible price. We mlllt depend on JrlformatlonSIIpplled 111 by academic departments, publishers and wholeulen. We will often auuest that you hold a book until additional infonnation is given to ua. U a department II undedded or baa not turned in information we can only assume the book will not be lllld and pay ac:t'OI'dlnllY unless you wish to wait - usually until the next buy back period. We dllllb malty of the changes as much as you do. On a campus, however, where academl<: freedom il pracUced -. book changes are frequent. Many books unfortWIItely, will hllve DO cull vaue. 'l'hill'DIUI that a new edition is out or due soon or a demand for that book no loDe• ailtl natiODIIl)'. PLEASE SELL ONLY YOUR BOOKS • NO ONE ELSES!! PI..&UE SHOW YOUR I.D. CARD. SELL EARLY AND AVOID THE RUSH. PAPERBACK BOOitS HAVE Ll'l'TLE OR NO WHOLESALE VALUE.

CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES!!! COLLEGE BOOK STORE

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Owned and Operated by Wake Forest Univeraity for the convenience of atuderill and faculty. · j

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Vol. LXIII

Con11 'to tr1

Cath,

The proposal special committE Trustees and t Convention, and convention's Cm Higher Educatioi university's trus

• state ChristiaD Wake Forest fro1 Program budge! by an individual

The plan was trustee subcom1 options at a i Winston-Salem A

• on Christian Il approved th~ re .its meeting in A

The proposal, redefines the rei. Wake Forest an from "au instih vention to an ins the convention mutually agreed

Negot

The re.comme1 months of negot1 Council on Education subcc by the Rev. Fr

' Statesville, . and trustee committ· chairman Ja1 Laurinburg.

lf approved I Trustees on Se~ Executive Comn Board on Sept. l will be presentee at the annual E vention in N ove1

Currently all N.C. Bapti-ets:- ·~ members, of th still come from Baptist State Cm

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A compromise committees of t1 Trustees redefine institutions.

The Rev. Jame! Church in Rutherf, as a gesture of gc venant relationshi

The General Bo; proposal when it ·

The General Be special escrow ! Program funds aJl, 80 year pending e.ll