revision emphasizes appeals - wakespace.lib.wfu.eduapr 09, 1976  · meiburg, colleen m. snavely,...

8
/ ···r,' .TODAY INSIDE . TODAY EDITORIALLY , . s Blue Leas . ny&u intfie n Of 6 . :sand tyers. eason ·have 1, and she uldn't team aham ·' some eople at the ly two ihoB!& · ssare ' 'l'bclses coulGG ranted& !!G c. you, G • 6 * THEATRE MOVE ···;*LAW SCHOOL -·- GRADES Vol.LIX / Wake ForestUDivenity, WIDitaa-SIIem, NorthCarolbaa, Friday, April I, 1171 * PASS/FAIL * ODK DISCRIMINATION! No. a Mortar Board Includes Ten Men By ANN JACKSON Staff Writer Controversy over the new members. Linda M. Kelly, Catherine A. Meiburg, Colleen M. Snavely, Jill E. MacKinnon, Katharine M. Amato, Rebecca J. MacMillan, Stephanie M. Glenn, Barbara Wrenn Banks, Miriam E. Acker, acceptance of members of the opposite sex arose in the university chapters of two national leadership societies last week, when Omicron Delta Kappa and Mortar Board tapped Mortar Board, fonnerly an all· female organization, ·named 22 new student members, ten of whom are men. ODK tapped only · three juniors, all of whom are males, along with three male seniors .. . Kathryn. R. Dorr, Lesley R. .. Joan Rope applies clown makeup to Don MacQueen in preparaUon for "Comedy of Errors" which opened Wednesday night. The play Is belog performed in a circus setting. Story·on page 8. < New members of Mortar Board, should they decide to join, are: Ford Sends Regrets President Gerald Ford has declined an invitation to speak at graduation this spring. In a letter to the university, a spokesman for Ford stated that although the President had wanted to attend the ceremony, a visit to the country by the French President made his presence in Washington necessary at that time. Speaking instead of Ford will be Dr. Harry M. Philpott, president of Auburn University. Philpott was a 1938 graduate of Washington and Lee University where he also. received an LL.D. in 1966. He received his Ph.D from Yale in 1947 and his Doctorate of Divinity from Stetson University in 1960." Philpott served as director of Religious Life at Washington and Lee from 1938 until 1940. In 1942 he was ordained as a minister to the Baptist Church. He has served as a professor of religion and as a dean, and has been very active on various . educational committees throughout his career. He served as chairman of the Alabama Educational Study Commission in the late '60s. Philpott's brother, J. Ropert Philpott, was a graduate of Wake Forest· College and a former trustee. Garrett, Betsey Reed, Carl Clifton Black, ill, William H. Wyttenback, Donald A. Girard, H. Robert Showers, Charles E. Johnson, David W. Kunz, Craig L. Nodtvedt, Stephen T .. Pendlebury, William L. Brown, and Douglas E. Murray. ODK tapped Johnson, Kunz, and Murray along with seniors Wayne Furin, David Knight, and Drake Eggleston. This year is the first time that these have had the option of admitting members of the opposite sex. Connie Cole, president of Mortar Board, said that the. women's society "bent over backwards" to take male members, since many expressed an interest .. in joining the society. "Mortar Board is still women- oriented, but we're allowing more input" by accepting male Revision Emphasizes Appeals By DEBBIE OWENS Staff Writer "Associate General Counselfor sata. ·Honor Council should a student could not get the administration the university, William "Under the newly proposed decide to sue the colUlcil, White to move until recently when Straughan, agrees that visitation system, a Case Referral Panel. said. The Housing Committee Provost Edwin Wilson formed a A proposed revision in the is a social issue and should be: consisting of the dean of men or would also become an appeals committee to study possible present student judicial process handled by the SJB," White said. women, a faculty advisor to SJB, body consisting of the dean of reforms. would provide students with "There is no due process in the and a co-chairman of the SJB, .men or women, the coordinator of "The present proposal was safeguards to ensure due process Housing Committee and people would decide proper jurisdiction student services and the made possible by the concern of while removing the possibilities who have violated the· for reported violations," White residence hall director. the Board of Visitors, Bill of overlapping jurisdiction and intervisitation policy have gotten said. The case referral and straughan, and Coordinator of double jeopardy, according to hurt this year because of this lack "Cases of property damage or jwisdiction of the Honor Council Student Services Dave Hills " · Knox White, a member of the of due process." illegal possession will be sent to reii!ll.ins unchanged, as is the White said. ,The Board of committee working· on judicial . White said that the problem of the housing director. In cases of traffic appeals system. "did their homework" and reform. · · overlapping juriSdiction is most student misconduct, the · Case White said that the impetus for questioned the present The new judicial system would serious in visitation cases. While . . Referral Panel shall req1,1est that restructuring the present judicial .Judic.Ia.l c.·. - .•. sy,st, , .. .noting· eliminate inconsisten.cies that . visitation is a ccViOliltion. Of .thli .. :...:.:!m· COnduct . an'· 8YsteJii"was' provroed 'joiritly by confilSlllnS'' :.UJd. ca1Jmg '.for ·lead to unfairness in case room· contract, unauthorized Jl.l.ld ,J·eport the the. students and ·aclmin"i.stration. · revisions .in. a report tbat has decisions and would emphasize entry.aJ!d · findings to the panel," he said. Students have had good concrete been regarded as classified by. White bad high praise for SJB co-chairmen Paul Coble and Stuart Markman who also worked on the new proposal. "They have done an outstanding job on the SJB," he said. "Last year . the SJB was regarded as failing "to carry out its jobs and was held in considerably low esteem by the. students and administration," he said. ''Last year a proPosal like this would have been laughed at," White commented. "But not· now." the importance of the student's a university official acting m The new proposal more clearly ideas for a long time he said but the university, he said. White. said that each time an considered social violations and jurisdiction over which cases in alleged violation occurs, there is these cases are tried by the SJB. order to avoid conflicts, White confusion over which judicial Of the two visitation cases said. Visitation has been changed body has jurisdiction over it. The acted on last fall, White said that to a social violation with benefit present guidelines determining one was regarded as a social of due process Wlder the new whether a violation is social or violation while the other was system. contractual are unclear, he said, treated as an unauthorized entry White said that another aspect and this vagueness could lead to a case. He said that in the case of the new proposal is that a person being tried twice for the considered as a · contract student accused of social same offense, a violation of one's violation, the student had been misconduct now has a choice of constitutional rights. illegally entering a woman's procedure he wants to Dean of Men Mark Reese now room through the window. The take. He may choose to stand decides jurisdiction of the cases. other case of visitation was tried trial before the SJB or he may In all cases involving room as illegal entry and 1}1e student waive the right to trial by contract violations, . which received the benefit of a SJB entering a plea of no contest (or ·includes visitation, . White said trial. guilty), in which case a penalty is that the accused person goes White said that the illegal entry set by the Referral Panel. The before the Housing· Committee in clause was originally meant to student may appeal the panel's an informal manner without the refer to breaking into such areas decision to the Student benefit of due process. The as professors' offices. If this Governance Committee. resultsofthecasearenotentered illegal entry clause can be Also under the new system, on his permanent record. applied to visitation, White cases can be appealed ·to a yet . "The Housing Committee by its continued, then failure to unnamed highest appeals board very nature is unfair," White comply with a university official which will consist of students, said. "The committee is not a can be construed to mean failing faculty members and court and we need a court to to obey an RA while visitating. administrators. The presence of handle the intervisitation This clause was actually meant this board ensures fairness to the violations. to apply to the campus police, he student anil. also provides a safeguard ·to members of the Housing Committee ... , Director of Housing Possession-Damage Violations animals electrical appliance regulations firearms firecrackers · illegal drug possession waterbeds JUDICIAL SYSTEM PROPOSAL lligbest Appeals Board I . Student Judicial Board I Case Referral Panel J Social)fisconduct Violations excessive noise, interference of others' rights sales from room distribution or use of illegal drugs hazing defacement of grounds gambling indecent exposure-language .public consumption of alcohol; misbehavior while intoxicated obstruction of academics unauthorized entry or occupation of university facility which is closed or restricted as to use visitation • • · failure to comply with university . act:mg in performance Honor Council I Academic Dean ' . Honor VIolations cheating plagiarism stealing bad debts members, Cole explained. nominate women,' " Reece said, Cole doubts that females received serious consideration for ODK membership. "If they did consider women, I'm sure it was not done in a fair way, and I resent that." Steve Smith, an ODK member, voiced concern that dual extension of invitations to membership in Mortar Board Dr. William E. Cage, senior advisor of the Wake Forest Mortar Board chapter, disagrees with Cole. "I think it's a mistake in the long-range function of Mortar Board," Cage said . "There's one hellacious difference in the number of males and females on campus. It can't help but be that ultimately the males are going to dominate .... Ultimately, I think it's their (Mortar Board's) own und()ing." Knox White, president of ODK, argued for the acceptance of women into that society. He feels that "for ODK, it would be a very healthy step. The object is to bring together student leaders and faculty ml:!mbers. It says 'Here are the qualifications; find students ,' and there is no way that means discrimination by sex." · and ODK might be unhealthy. "If we admitted women and they admitted men, we would be selecting members from the same categories. One (organization) could become ''lopsided" if those students tapped by both organizations chose to join only one society, Smith said. White claims that Dean of Men Mark Reece, who is a voting member of ODK, is "adalnanJ'..'. that the society remain an all- male organization. "Dean Reece is thinking in tbe lines of tradition," said White. Reece, while admitting that he is opposed to extending membership to women, said he is not adamant about his stance and predicted that females will be inducted into ODK in coming years. "My concern was for the strong possibility that :you reduce the number of men who would be recognized. I don't believe that the circle has decided that they will not take women. I don't think anypne said, 'We will not According to Cole, Mortar Board has had no refusals from the males tapped by both groups this year. "They (ODK) think Mortar Board is going to die, but by only choosing three members, they've put the noose around their own neck," she said. Consideration of Title IX guidelines in regard to ODK's . position is a technically intricate problem. According to White, Title IX is violated if the university supports an organization which is found to be discriminating. ODK receives no budget from the school, and thus the university does not "support" the society in the usual sense of the word. Cole sees no question about the matter of a Title IX violation. "I don't see how ODK can get around a lawsuit. It is a law that they have to at least consider members of the opposite sex." SG Legislature Defeats· Proposal A resolution calling for a meeting of representatives from all student organizations to discuss ways to provide better response to student proposals was defeated by the Student Government legislature Tuesday night. . The resolution, submitted by Andy Ciriaco, proposed the following: 1) A "direct appeal to alumni throUgh a pooling of resources, in an attempt to get alumni support behind student. rights on campus .... 2) "The permailent retainment of a student attorney, hired through SG, with all organizations he\ping to compensate the lawyer.... This would include research with HEW and other governmental agencies. i 3) "Direct information to incoming freshmen ... 4) "The formation of a pennanent board, consisting of representatives from each student organization; for the purpose of planning •strategies before presenting proposals to the administration.... 5) "Any means to further student unity on campus; and · 6) "That Student Government, through its new officers, petition the Board of Trustees directly for ·a complete review of student rights on campus in general and SG functions in particular in order to put an end to the hypocritical statement in the Student Handbook that SG works hand-in-hand with the Administration on policy matters affecting students. Either give SG some real power and a real chance to lobby for change or end "its existence and the hypocrisy of using it as a showcase for outsiders." In other action SG approved a $300 grant to College Union for Springfest. Following proposals, the legislature heard farewell remarks from out going ·President Andy Cromer and Vice President Andy Ciriaco. Dean of the College Thomas Mullen then swore in new SG President Bobby Kutteh, who in turn swore in the other officers. Problems ·Identified in . Pass/Fail System By JEFF COBB Staff Writer Faculty members are considering the problems in administering the pass-fail grading system because, since its inception in the fall of 1967, it has seen an increasing amount of abuse on the part of students, according to Dr. David Smiley, professor of history. "I won't take either the blame or the credit," said Smiley, when i asked if it was true that he was responsible for initiating the system at Wake Forest. A few years ago, Smiley, ah ;, alumnus of the University of Wisconsin, learned that his alma mater had adopted the pass-fail system. With this in mind, toward the end of a speech he delivered· in Wait Chapel during the now- defunct Honors Day ceremony, Smiley referred t() the system which he thought "would help make the liberal education as from the original purpose of tbe interests of the students, that graduate schools a dim student shifts his goals, he has a from their major- field of study. system. Rather than use it for according to Dr. Howell Smith, view of the practice, said Dean of problem he added. Smiley estimated that 90 per cent risk-free exploration of new associate professor of history. the College Thomas Mullen Some students also experience of the students who have taken academic horizons, they seem to According to Smith, in Mullen believes that, while it is difficulty as a result of being courses pass-fail from him would employ the system as a means of attempting to simultaneously difficult to cite specific required to take some courses in have received As and Bs. · ''sliding•:. through various avoid reneging on guarantees examples, schools their major field, only Smiley thinks that one thing courses, m order to ease their made to upperclass students in been known to file transcnpts, offered on a pass-fail bas1s. In can be done is to assign different academic load, he said. their freshman catalogues and to bearing a high number of pass- this case, the student would have departments to different Smiley said the system was revise the system, the fail grades, alongside other to plan acco.rdingly, be said. classifications. While recognizing designed to let students take requirements for taking courses "second clAss" applications. He Mullen said the system's the cwnbersome nature of such unfamiliar subjects. He said on a pass-fail basis have been said that a woman who graduated original aim was "exclustvely an idea, he says that such a worrying over grades tends to eased. Under the old semester in the late 1960s from a college and specifically to encourage a procedure would eliminate the make students "cautious" about calendar system. a student was which offered all courses on a student who was interested in possibility of a student taking for taking difficult courses outside of allowed to credit up to four pass- mandatory basis of pass-fail trying a particular course or field a pass-fail grade any course their latown strengths. fail courses towards graduation, found it almost impossible to gain without jeopardizing his grade listed in the same category as his B k . .t d and students are now allowed 24 admission to the top law schools. average. I feel fairly confident major. . Y ma mg l a for credits, said Smith. The student that for some students it fulfills the studen.t to mto new . who previously could only take Mullen has received inquiries that promise," he said. Mullen also recognizes the Smiley thinks the system one-tenth of his courses towards from Wake Forest graduates desirability of such a system,·but, nught. help the student graduation pass-fail, now may asking to have pass-fail grades on Mullen said he didn't know how like Smiley, also sees trouble in mterests. An, graduate with one-sixth of his their record changed to letter many students actually took assigning departments into such w1th a new course 'might even total courses pass-fail he said grades. While he said this is pass-fail with the original arbitrary categories. change the student's whole ' · unlikely, he added that a student purpose in mind. However, he Mullen said it might help to career orientation," he said. Smith blames part of the could have a professor write a added, "all too often," he had educate students on the However, the system bas problemontheold4-1-4calendar brief letter to a certain graduate heard students mention that a objectives of the pass-fail arrangement, and may not change it to a letter-grade basis after the first two , weeks of classes." Implicit in this statement Mullen pointed out, is stipulation that a student may not change from a letter-grade to pass-fail. MUllen said he would favor a system which requires a student to receive aCto obtain a passing grade, but on a unifonn basis. He said he was aware that some professors already employ this system, but thoUght it would be better if the policy were administered evenly. . 1 In evaluating the overall value of the pass-fail system to the liberal arts concept, he said, "Fundamentally, I don't think that it is an essential element. We are always going to have students who would be willing to risk something." : professor of economics, thinks the pass-fail system should be abolished. He said taking a course pass-fail might tend to lower the student's level of industriousness and result in a number of students who sit in class "like so many lumps of wood." He has not had many pass-fail students, but he said most of those would have received either an A or B under the letter·grade system. To discourage sliding, Cage employs the system in which a student must do C work in order to pass the course. The. students, he added, are always informed of this policy during the first class meeting each semester. He said he sees little use in bringing a proposal for a change to a faculty committee, adding, "I don't think we all have to have the same ground rules." · He also said too much of a ''degree of uniformity and conformity" was undesirable. broad as possible." ' ' ' The subject was next moved away from some· of the no longer in use, which school or prospective employer, course load would be too heavy if system. "We should make it rules assigned to it by the faculty indiscriminately assigned the outlining the quality of that they weren't taking a particular sufficiently clea.r to the student committee which approved it, he pass-fail system to many courses student's work in a particular course pass-fail. The system, he body what the purpose is," he said. Originally designed solely and pushed up the credit limit. class. said, was "never intended by the said. He said he believes that the for juniors and seniors, it is now The present level was decided Mullen also said that faculty for that prupose." university should also return to available to sophomores and upon by the Curriculwn Calendar occasionally the overabundance Smiley said the problem lies the orlgirial conditions set forth freshmen in four-week courses. Evaluation Committee, fonned of pass-fail grades may be mainly with the students who are for pass-fail. He cited the The pass·fail option has also been -earlier to investigate the pass-fail attributed to an honest mistake taking many courses, with which January 1968 edition of the expanded to count for more legal system, arid it has since been on the part of a student who they should have very. little "Bulletin of Wake Forest credits towards graduation. - disbanded, said Smith. selected a high number of pass- difficulty, on a pass-fail basis. He University," which states, "A He said he·thought pass-fail is more often selected by the better students on campus than by those in the lower half of their class. He said that based upon experience, those in the lower half usually seek easier courses and take them for a letter grade in order to bolster their grade average. Cage said he does not feel the student should necessarily receive a break, by making his grade average immune to injury when he ventures into new subject matter. He said, "Part of the price of taking that course should be the risk of a bad grade." •, considered by a faculty committee, which approved the measure in May of 1967, Smiley said, and it was implemented that fall. But now Smiley believes that some students have deviated The system seems to have If a student plans to use his fail courses, since he didn't said this especially includes student must indicate at the time gotten ·out of hand as a result of entire 24-credit allotment of intend to try for acceptance to students who take a course that of registration that be is choosing the faculty striving to protect the pass-fail courses, hP. should know graduate school. Later, if the varies little in general approach to take a course under this Some professors said the pass- fail system has no value. Dr. William Cage, associate

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Page 1: Revision Emphasizes Appeals - wakespace.lib.wfu.eduApr 09, 1976  · Meiburg, Colleen M. Snavely, Jill E. MacKinnon, Katharine M. Amato, Rebecca J. MacMillan, ... served as a professor

• /

·~

···r,' .TODAY INSIDE . TODAY EDITORIALLY

, . s

Blue Leas ~- . ny&u intfie n Of

6 .

t~ :sand tyers. eason ·have 1, and

she uldn't team aham ·'

some eople at the ly two ihoB!& ·

ssare with~ ' 'l'bclses som~ coulGG

ranted& !!G

c.

you,

• •

G • 6

* THEATRE MOVE

···;*LAW SCHOOL -·-

GRADES

Vol.LIX

/

Wake ForestUDivenity, WIDitaa-SIIem, NorthCarolbaa, Friday, April I, 1171

* PASS/FAIL

* ODK DISCRIMINATION!

No. a

Mortar Board Includes Ten Men By ANN JACKSON

Staff Writer

Controversy over the

new members. Linda M. Kelly, Catherine A. Meiburg, Colleen M. Snavely, Jill E. MacKinnon, Katharine M. Amato, Rebecca J. MacMillan, Stephanie M. Glenn, Barbara Wrenn Banks, Miriam E. Acker,

acceptance of members of the opposite sex arose in the university chapters of two national leadership societies last week, when Omicron Delta Kappa and Mortar Board tapped

Mortar Board, fonnerly an all· female organization, ·named 22 new student members, ten of whom are men. ODK tapped only · three juniors, all of whom are males, along with three male seniors ..

. Kathryn. R. Dorr, Lesley R.

.. Joan Rope applies clown makeup to Don MacQueen in preparaUon for "Comedy of Errors" which opened Wednesday night. The play Is belog performed in a circus setting. Story·on page 8. <

New members of Mortar Board, should they decide to join, are:

Ford Sends Regrets President Gerald Ford has

declined an invitation to speak at graduation this spring. In a letter to the university, a spokesman for Ford stated that although the President had wanted to attend the ceremony, a visit to the country by the French President made his presence in Washington necessary at that time.

Speaking instead of Ford will be Dr. Harry M. Philpott, president of Auburn University. Philpott was a 1938 graduate of Washington and Lee University where he also. received an LL.D. in 1966. He received his Ph.D from Yale in 1947 and his

Doctorate of Divinity from Stetson University in 1960."

Philpott served as director of Religious Life at Washington and Lee from 1938 until 1940. In 1942 he was ordained as a minister to the Baptist Church. He has served as a professor of religion and as a dean, and has been very active on various . educational committees throughout his career. He served as chairman of the Alabama Educational Study Commission in the late '60s.

Philpott's brother, J. Ropert Philpott, was a graduate of Wake Forest· College and a former trustee.

Garrett, Betsey Reed, Carl Clifton Black, ill, William H. Wyttenback, Donald A. Girard, H. Robert Showers, Charles E . Johnson, David W. Kunz, Craig L. Nodtvedt, Stephen T .. Pendlebury, William L. Brown, and Douglas E. Murray.

ODK tapped Johnson, Kunz, and Murray along with seniors Wayne Furin, David Knight, and Drake Eggleston.

This year is the first time that these organizat~ns have had the option of admitting members of the opposite sex.

Connie Cole, president of Mortar Board, said that the. women's society "bent over backwards" to take male members, since many expressed an interest .. in joining the society. "Mortar Board is still women­oriented, but we're allowing more input" by accepting male

Revision Emphasizes Appeals By DEBBIE OWENS

Staff Writer "Associate General Counselfor sata. ·Honor Council should a student could not get the administration

the university, William "Under the newly proposed decide to sue the colUlcil, White to move until recently when Straughan, agrees that visitation system, a Case Referral Panel. said. The Housing Committee Provost Edwin Wilson formed a

A proposed revision in the is a social issue and should be: consisting of the dean of men or would also become an appeals committee to study possible present student judicial process handled by the SJB," White said. women, a faculty advisor to SJB, body consisting of the dean of reforms. would provide students with "There is no due process in the and a co-chairman of the SJB, .men or women, the coordinator of "The present proposal was safeguards to ensure due process Housing Committee and people would decide proper jurisdiction student services and the made possible by the concern of while removing the possibilities who have violated the· for reported violations," White residence hall director. the Board of Visitors, Bill of overlapping jurisdiction and intervisitation policy have gotten said. The case referral and straughan, and Coordinator of double jeopardy, according to hurt this year because of this lack "Cases of property damage or jwisdiction of the Honor Council Student Services Dave Hills " · Knox White, a member of the of due process." illegal possession will be sent to reii!ll.ins unchanged, as is the White said. ,The Board of Visito~s committee working· on judicial . White said that the problem of the housing director. In cases of traffic appeals system. "did their homework" and reform. · · overlapping juriSdiction is most student misconduct, the · Case White said that the impetus for serio~y questioned the present

The new judicial system would serious in visitation cases. While . . Referral Panel shall req1,1est that restructuring the present judicial .Judic.Ia.l c.·. - .•. sy,st, e,~g,. , .. .noting· eliminate inconsisten.cies that . visitation is a ccViOliltion. Of .thli .. :...:.:!m· 's.JB:O.zn.enib~A":;-1 COnduct . an'· 8YsteJii"was' provroed 'joiritly by confilSlllnS'' :.UJd. ca1Jmg '.for

·lead to unfairness in case room· contract, unauthorized investiga~iQI.l Jl.l.ld ,J·eport the the. students and ·aclmin"i.stration. · revisions .in. a report tbat has decisions and would emphasize entry.aJ!d ~ailure.t? comp~y wi~ · findings to the panel," he said. Students have had good concrete been regarded as classified by.

White bad high praise for SJB co-chairmen Paul Coble and Stuart Markman who also worked on the new proposal.

"They have done an outstanding job on the SJB," he said. "Last year . the SJB was regarded as failing "to carry out its jobs and was held in considerably low esteem by the. students and administration," he said.

''Last year a proPosal like this would have been laughed at," White commented. "But not· now." the importance of the student's a university official acting m The new proposal more clearly ideas for a long time he said but the university, he said.

~~a~~~sa~ p~orma~eofhb.jobare. oo~-~~~~~Y~ ~----~·-·~--·------------------------White. said that each time an considered social violations and jurisdiction over which cases in

alleged violation occurs, there is these cases are tried by the SJB. order to avoid conflicts, White confusion over which judicial Of the two visitation cases said. Visitation has been changed body has jurisdiction over it. The acted on last fall, White said that to a social violation with benefit present guidelines determining one was regarded as a social of due process Wlder the new whether a violation is social or violation while the other was system. contractual are unclear, he said, treated as an unauthorized entry White said that another aspect and this vagueness could lead to a case. He said that in the case of the new proposal is that a person being tried twice for the considered as a · contract student accused of social same offense, a violation of one's violation, the student had been misconduct now has a choice of constitutional rights. illegally entering a woman's whi~ procedure he wants to

Dean of Men Mark Reese now room through the window. The take. He may choose to stand decides jurisdiction of the cases. other case of visitation was tried trial before the SJB or he may

In all cases involving room as illegal entry and 1}1e student waive the right to trial by contract violations, . which received the benefit of a SJB entering a plea of no contest (or

·includes visitation, . White said trial. guilty), in which case a penalty is that the accused person goes White said that the illegal entry set by the Referral Panel. The before the Housing· Committee in clause was originally meant to student may appeal the panel's an informal manner without the refer to breaking into such areas decision to the Student benefit of due process. The as professors' offices. If this Governance Committee. resultsofthecasearenotentered illegal entry clause can be Also under the new system, on his permanent record. applied to visitation, White cases can be appealed ·to a yet

. "The Housing Committee by its continued, then failure to unnamed highest appeals board very nature is unfair," White comply with a university official which will consist of students, said. "The committee is not a can be construed to mean failing faculty members and court and we need a court to to obey an RA while visitating. administrators. The presence of handle the intervisitation This clause was actually meant this board ensures fairness to the violations. to apply to the campus police, he student anil. also provides a

safeguard ·to members of the

Housing Committee ... , Director of Housing

Possession-Damage Violations

animals electrical appliance

regulations firearms firecrackers

· illegal drug possession waterbeds

JUDICIAL SYSTEM

PROPOSAL

lligbest Appeals Board I . Student Judicial Board

I Case Referral Panel

J Social)fisconduct Violations

excessive noise, interference of others' rights

sales from room distribution or use of

illegal drugs hazing defacement of grounds gambling indecent exposure-language .public consumption of alcohol;

misbehavior while intoxicated obstruction of academics unauthorized entry or occupation

of university facility which is closed or restricted as to use visitation • • · failure to comply with university .

offi~ial act:mg in performance

Honor Council I

Academic Dean ' . Honor VIolations

cheating plagiarism stealing bad debts

members, Cole explained. nominate women,' " Reece said, Cole doubts that females

received serious consideration for ODK membership. "If they did consider women, I'm sure it was not done in a fair way, and I resent that."

Steve Smith, an ODK member, voiced concern that dual extension of invitations to membership in Mortar Board

Dr. William E. Cage, senior advisor of the Wake Forest Mortar Board chapter, disagrees with Cole. "I think it's a mistake in the long-range function of Mortar Board," Cage said . "There's one hellacious difference in the number of males and females on campus. It can't help but be that ultimately the males are going to dominate .... Ultimately, I think it's their (Mortar Board's) own und()ing."

Knox White, president of ODK, argued for the acceptance of women into that society. He feels that "for ODK, it would be a very healthy step. The object is to bring together student leaders and faculty ml:!mbers. It says 'Here are the qualifications; find students ,' and there is no way that means discrimination by sex."

· and ODK might be unhealthy. "If we admitted women and they admitted men, we would be selecting members from the same categories. One (organization) could become ''lopsided" if those students tapped by both organizations chose to join only one society, Smith said.

White claims that Dean of Men Mark Reece, who is a voting member of ODK, is "adalnanJ'..'. that the society remain an all­male organization. "Dean Reece is thinking in tbe lines of tradition," said White.

Reece, while admitting that he is opposed to extending membership to women, said he is not adamant about his stance and predicted that females will be inducted into ODK in coming years.

"My concern was for the strong possibility that :you reduce the number of men who would be recognized. I don't believe that the circle has decided that they will not take women. I don't think anypne said, 'We will not

According to Cole, Mortar Board has had no refusals from the males tapped by both groups this year. "They (ODK) think Mortar Board is going to die, but by only choosing three members, they've put the noose around their own neck," she said.

Consideration of Title IX guidelines in regard to ODK's . position is a technically intricate problem. According to White, Title IX is violated if the university supports an organization which is found to be discriminating. ODK receives no budget from the school, and thus the university does not "support" the society in the usual sense of the word.

Cole sees no question about the matter of a Title IX violation. "I don't see how ODK can get around a lawsuit. It is a law that they have to at least consider members of the opposite sex."

SG Legislature Defeats· Proposal

A resolution calling for a meeting of representatives from all student organizations to discuss ways to provide better response to student proposals was defeated by the Student Government legislature Tuesday night. .

The resolution, submitted by Andy Ciriaco, proposed the following:

1) A "direct appeal to alumni throUgh a pooling of resources, in an attempt to get alumni support behind student. rights on campus ....

2) "The permailent retainment of a student attorney, hired through SG, with all organizations he\ping to compensate the lawyer.... This would include research with HEW and other governmental agencies. i

3) "Direct information to incoming freshmen ... ~

4) "The formation of a pennanent board, consisting of representatives from each student organization; for the purpose of planning • strategies before presenting proposals to

the administration .... 5) "Any means to further

student unity on campus; and · 6) "That Student Government, through its new officers, petition the Board of Trustees directly for ·a complete review of student rights on campus in general and SG functions in particular in order to put an end to the hypocritical statement in the Student Handbook that SG works hand-in-hand with the Administration on policy matters affecting students. Either give SG some real power and a real chance to lobby for change or end "its existence and the hypocrisy of using it as a showcase for outsiders."

In other action SG approved a $300 grant to College Union for Springfest.

Following proposals, the legislature heard farewell remarks from out going ·President Andy Cromer and Vice President Andy Ciriaco. Dean of the College Thomas Mullen then swore in new SG President Bobby Kutteh, who in turn swore in the other officers.

Problems ·Identified in . Pass/Fail System By JEFF COBB

Staff Writer

Faculty members are considering the problems in administering the pass-fail grading system because, since its inception in the fall of 1967, it has seen an increasing amount of abuse on the part of students, according to Dr. David Smiley, professor of history.

"I won't take either the blame or the credit," said Smiley, when

i asked if it was true that he was responsible for initiating the system at Wake Forest.

A few years ago, Smiley, ah ;, alumnus of the University of

Wisconsin, learned that his alma mater had adopted the pass-fail system. With this in mind, toward the end of a speech he delivered· in Wait Chapel during the now­defunct Honors Day ceremony, Smiley referred t() the system which he thought "would help make the liberal education as

from the original purpose of tbe interests of the students, that graduate schools ~ke a dim student shifts his goals, he has a from their major- field of study. system. Rather than use it for according to Dr. Howell Smith, view of the practice, said Dean of problem he added. Smiley estimated that 90 per cent risk-free exploration of new associate professor of history. the College Thomas Mullen Some students also experience of the students who have taken academic horizons, they seem to According to Smith, in Mullen believes that, while it is difficulty as a result of being courses pass-fail from him would employ the system as a means of attempting to simultaneously difficult to cite specific required to take some courses in have received As and Bs. · ''sliding•:. through various avoid reneging on guarantees examples, gradua~e schools ~ve their major field, whi~ ar~ only Smiley thinks that one thing courses, m order to ease their made to upperclass students in been known to file transcnpts, offered on a pass-fail bas1s. In can be done is to assign different academic load, he said. their freshman catalogues and to bearing a high number of pass- this case, the student would have departments to different

Smiley said the system was revise the system, the fail grades, alongside other to plan acco.rdingly, be said. classifications. While recognizing designed to let students take requirements for taking courses "second clAss" applications. He Mullen said the system's the cwnbersome nature of such unfamiliar subjects. He said on a pass-fail basis have been said that a woman who graduated original aim was "exclustvely an idea, he says that such a worrying over grades tends to eased. Under the old semester in the late 1960s from a college and specifically to encourage a procedure would eliminate the make students "cautious" about calendar system. a student was which offered all courses on a student who was interested in possibility of a student taking for taking difficult courses outside of allowed to credit up to four pass- mandatory basis of pass-fail trying a particular course or field a pass-fail grade any course their latown strengths. fail courses towards graduation, found it almost impossible to gain without jeopardizing his grade listed in the same category as his

B k. .t d and students are now allowed 24 admission to the top law schools. average. I feel fairly confident major.

. Y ma mg l a vanta~eous for credits, said Smith. The student that for some students it fulfills the studen.t to v~nture mto new . who previously could only take Mullen has received inquiries that promise," he said. Mullen also recognizes the ar~as, Smiley thinks the system one-tenth of his courses towards from Wake Forest graduates desirability of such a system,·but, nught. help the student d~velop graduation pass-fail, now may asking to have pass-fail grades on Mullen said he didn't know how like Smiley, also sees trouble in n~w mterests. An, e~enment graduate with one-sixth of his their record changed to letter many students actually took assigning departments into such w1th a new course 'might even total courses pass-fail he said grades. While he said this is pass-fail with the original arbitrary categories. change the student's whole ' · unlikely, he added that a student purpose in mind. However, he Mullen said it might help to career orientation," he said. Smith blames part of the could have a professor write a added, "all too often," he had educate students on the

However, the system bas problemontheold4-1-4calendar brief letter to a certain graduate heard students mention that a objectives of the pass-fail

arrangement, and may not change it to a letter-grade basis after the first two , weeks of classes."

Implicit in this statement Mullen pointed out, is th~ stipulation that a student may not change from a letter-grade to pass-fail.

MUllen said he would favor a system which requires a student to receive aCto obtain a passing grade, but on a unifonn basis. He said he was aware that some professors already employ this system, but thoUght it would be better if the policy were administered evenly. .

1 In evaluating the overall value of the pass-fail system to the liberal arts concept, he said, "Fundamentally, I don't think that it is an essential element. We are always going to have students who would be willing to risk something." :

professor of economics, thinks the pass-fail system should be abolished. He said taking a course pass-fail might tend to lower the student's level of industriousness and result in a number of students who sit in class "like so many lumps of wood."

He has not had many pass-fail students, but he said most of those would have received either an A or B under the letter·grade system.

To discourage sliding, Cage employs the system in which a student must do C work in order to pass the course. The. students, he added, are always informed of this policy during the first class meeting each semester.

He said he sees little use in bringing a proposal for a change to a faculty committee, adding, "I don't think we all have to have the same ground rules." ·

He also said too much of a ''degree of uniformity and conformity" was undesirable.

broad as possible." ' ' ' The subject was next

moved away from some· of the no longer in use, which school or prospective employer, course load would be too heavy if system. "We should make it rules assigned to it by the faculty indiscriminately assigned the outlining the quality of that they weren't taking a particular sufficiently clea.r to the student committee which approved it, he pass-fail system to many courses student's work in a particular course pass-fail. The system, he body what the purpose is," he said. Originally designed solely and pushed up the credit limit. class. said, was "never intended by the said. He said he believes that the for juniors and seniors, it is now The present level was decided Mullen also said that faculty for that prupose." university should also return to available to sophomores and upon by the Curriculwn Calendar occasionally the overabundance Smiley said the problem lies the orlgirial conditions set forth freshmen in four-week courses. Evaluation Committee, fonned of pass-fail grades may be mainly with the students who are for pass-fail. He cited the The pass·fail option has also been -earlier to investigate the pass-fail attributed to an honest mistake taking many courses, with which January 1968 edition of the expanded to count for more legal system, arid it has since been on the part of a student who they should have very. little "Bulletin of Wake Forest credits towards graduation. - disbanded, said Smith. selected a high number of pass- difficulty, on a pass-fail basis. He University," which states, "A

He said he·thought pass-fail is more often selected by the better students on campus than by those in the lower half of their class. He said that based upon experience, those in the lower half usually seek easier courses and take them for a letter grade in order to bolster their grade average.

Cage said he does not feel the student should necessarily receive a break, by making his grade average immune to injury when he ventures into new subject matter. He said, "Part of the price of taking that course should be the risk of a bad grade."

•,

considered by a faculty committee, which approved the measure in May of 1967, Smiley said, and it was implemented that fall.

But now Smiley believes that some students have deviated

The system seems to have If a student plans to use his fail courses, since he didn't said this especially includes student must indicate at the time gotten ·out of hand as a result of entire 24-credit allotment of intend to try for acceptance to students who take a course that of registration that be is choosing the faculty striving to protect the pass-fail courses, hP. should know graduate school. Later, if the varies little in general approach to take a course under this

Some professors said the pass­fail system has no value. Dr. William Cage, associate

Page 2: Revision Emphasizes Appeals - wakespace.lib.wfu.eduApr 09, 1976  · Meiburg, Colleen M. Snavely, Jill E. MacKinnon, Katharine M. Amato, Rebecca J. MacMillan, ... served as a professor

Student Starts'W afoo~ Scribbler"'" ..... ..,_,,.

Geoffrey Shorter Photo by Brown

By JULIA DRAKE Assistant Editor

To a growing number of people in the U.S., "the magic words 'mail order' seem to be the dollar-paved road to riches!"

So says a columnist in America's newest mail order publication, "Wafoo Scribbler." Geoffrey Shorter, a Wake Forest freshman who edits the magazine, said most people who get involved in mail order are retired and looking for a second income.

"It can become a first income," he said, citing as example one 3D-year veteran of the mail order business who makes $24,000 yearly.

An estimated 250 mail order publications exist in America

today. Shorter writes in "The Scribbler" that the people who really make money in mail order are the publishers.

"This I had realized some time ago," he said, "and "The Wafoo Scribbler" is the end product of that realization."

The advertiser is the publisher's source of income. Shorter said he lost money on his first two issues because dealers are reluctant to 'advertise in publications which have not yet established themselves. He said he is breaking even on the April issue as advertisers are rallying to his support.

The circulation of "The Wafoo Scribbler" amounts to 2,000 copies mailed out to dealers and subscribers. Shorter described his reading audience as "a circle

of people who are interested in mail order." Money circulates through the publisher, the dealers who advertise, and tl~e buyer.

The first issue of "The Scribbler" was a test of the editor's endurance, Shorter said. He worked day and night, 38 hours straight, to get the copy ready for shipment to his printer in Michigan.

"If this isn't dedication to the job, I don't know what is," he writes.

Shorter considers his publication unique in its field because of the articles and anecdotes it contains in addition to the ads. Many of the articles by guest columnists describe the trials and traumas of getting into the mail order business.

Shorter explains how he canie up with a title like "The Wafoo Scribbler" for a mail order publication; He said at the pre­school retreat in August "the one thing I remembered from the booklet we all received was that Wake Forest was referred to as 'WAFOO.' I had always wanted to use the word 'scribbler' in my title because my handwriting is terrible. What else could the title of the publication be but "Wafoo Scribbler?"

With the release of his first issue, Shorter said his father Dr. Robert Shorter, chairman of the English department commended his "breezy journalistic style. But he told me, 'You really must learn to write someday,' " Shorter concluded.

, .. Pro !t. ..

' Vocations Chosen Late By TOM BLAND

·Staff Writer

Second In a series.

·oc· While professors form a unique :katernity, they rarely look back on their childhoods and see that

'ihey possessed a special ambition t-fo become college teachers. Like !most children, they never :seiiously considered a life of scholarship until they were well advanced in their college studies.

Some reached circuitously the decision to become college

· professors. Others, when they decided to make college teaching their vocation, had to surmount enormous obstacles to realize their goals.

Dr. Huerman Eure, assistant professor of biology and the first

black instructor in the university's history, belongs in the latter category, and readily admits it.

"My experience, I guess, is really different from most situations," he said.

While Eure did not decide to become a professor until the second semester of his freshman year at Maryland State College, there was never any question about his attending school. ·-.. I guess I was smart enough to

know that science was the up­and-coming field," he added. "I had foresight enough to know that there weren't many blacks in science. That was the field to get in if you wanted to get ahead."

After graduating from college, Eure decided to do his graduate work at Wake Forest because "I

For Your Convenience

had been through a completely black situation all my life, and I wanted to see if I could do as well as whites at the equivalent stage."

At the lmiversity he met Dr. Gerald Esch, associate professor of biology who proved to be a positive influence.

"Esch did more for me than any other advisor on campus," said Eure .. "He made me do things as the only black in the Wake Forest graduate program that I really resented, at first, until I finally realized that he was trying to make me a better scientist. What he was trying to do was make me as good as or better than anyboqy corning out of that department."

Eure's efforts were rewarded when, in 1974, he was appointed to the faculty. "I never even conceived of staying at Wake Forest and teaching," he said, "but the right situation came along."

ille blacks, women often face ntunerous obstacles to become college teachers. One of the chief problems women face, according to Deborah Best, psychology instructor, is that of transcending the old roles in society.

Some women are reluctant to pursue academic careers, she said, but Best added that, as a young person, she was allowed to pursue nontraditional interests as well as the ones commonly associated with women. "My parents let me develop like I wanted to. It was okay to play girls' basketball and bring A s back from high school. And I also learned to cook and sew and other more feminine types of things," she said.

However, Dr. Elizabeth Phillips, professor of English, found the problem was m choosing a vocation. "I had never wanted to be a teacher, I thought," she said. "But I had always thought that I wanted what is commonly called a career. I always had encouragement from my parents to work. My mother was in business, and it never occurred to me that a woman could't work both outside and in the house."

Phillips did not decide to become a college teacher ootil after she had worked as a journalist. "I was always interested in writing, and I was particularly interested in writing poetry," she said. "I found that I wanted to learn more than I knew about literature. So, I dedded I

might as well teach and be paid to read literature," she laughed.

Many faculty members decided to become professors after pursuing other careers. Gary Cook, art instructor, is an

example. "I owned a small construction

company that consisted of myself and four or five employees," said Cook. "The days were very long. That left the weekends for research and painting, which wqs not much time."

After Cook entered graduate school, he decided that the college environment was for him. "I was at a certain stage," he mused; "and I understood that if I wanted to expand my knowledge and continue research, I had to be in some kind of profession that would allow me to do that."

One professor interviewed, however, did not have to go through such a process in deciding to become a college teacher. Unlike most of his colleagues, Dr. James Barefield, associate professor of history, decided early upon his discipline and vocation.

"I wanted. to be a trash collector for some time," said Barefield. ''But on the whole, I decided I wanted to do history fairly early-at about four and a half. I latched on to George Washington then."

Barefield · was equally precocious in resolving to become a professor. By age 15, he had made up his mind. "I liked history and I didn't want to teach in high school. ... But I always wanted to teach. I was telling people off at an early age."

Busy Schedule Planned For IFC Greek Week The annual Inter-Fraternity­

Council sponsored Greek Week will begin Monday with Jersey Day when all fraternity members will wear their respective jerseys. r · ·

The Plaza 500 skate and tricycle races will take place on the quad at 4 p.m. Wednesday.

Week Dance at the Benton Convention Center at 9 p.m. Maurie·, Williams and the Zodiacs will play the Greek Week' Queen will be·ctowned during the· dance~ "' ..... , .. · -a. .. ·~ ---""' ~ ·" · :~

Saturday, .... April: 17, the Steeplechase at Tanglewood Park will bring an end to the activities.

Depending on the Both of Shorter's parents are teachers. He said, "My mother wants me to be a doctor I had !planned on being a lawyer. Right now l'm considering a business career.

success of· "The · .:· Scribbler,,. Shorter said he ho~ .. . : ···'· to move on to something bigger lir ·:·: ,. · the world of publications; .

WllC's Women's Week Celebrated

By KAY KILLIAN Staff Writer

Thursday's· topic. Marsha Darling of Duke University will zpeak on "Educational

The Women's Residence Opportunities for College Cooocil will sponsor its third Women" at 11 a;m. in Reynolda's annual Women's Celebration reading rocim. or: Nancy Joiner Week Tuesday through Friday. from · WesteJ;"n ·Carolina

According to WRC Secretary University will speak in the same Jane Owens, chairperson for the . place at 5 p.m. on "Women in event, WRC has allocated $2,000 Literature." · for the week. Intervarsity Christian·· .• ..

A celebration of Women in Fine Fellowship will sponsor a lecture Arts, headed by Linda Chico, will by .P~ige ·Lyerly called "A; · . be on Tuesday. Laurie Wing of Chnst1an's Relation to. · .· Philadelphia will play the guitar World."

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and sing at 11 a.m. in Reynolda's Women and reading room. Opportwlities will be the •-~111: "'"'lf.;~~;,:

Also at 3:30 Tuesday, Dr. and· Friday. Lois Stovall, a Mrs. David Catron will lead a Forest alumna who is now: . couple enrichment program in American University will · • . ~ · Johnson's formal parlor. in the new donn lounge at 1 p.m. ·'·1' · ... Tuesday night at 7 in Reynolda's on "I'm a Lawyer; Now What1;' :. _;. •·. main lounge there will be a talent There will als() be a parl'hl : · ;·: · show in which university women discussion on Wake Forest . may participate. . wom~n and how they are . ,.

Also on Fine Arts Day an art· perceived. Panel members will · show and exhibit will open. include male and female faculty University women may enter members. · photography, handicrafts, College Union has booked woodcrafts, and poetry. Susan female singer Bonnie Raitt for Williams and Cindy Osborne are Saturday night. in charge of entries which may be given to them or to Dougal. MacKinnon. . .

Women in Health and Women and Their Bodies will be Wednesday's topics. Glor:ia Love of Family Planning is scheduled to lecture on contraceptives at 2:30 p.m. in Reynolda. 202. She will have an exhibit of contraceptives and answer . questions.

Deborah Best, psychology instructor, will speak at 4 p.m. on · psychological weight reduction. Margaret Dunkle, associate director of the Project on Status and Education, will speak on Title IX with particular emphasis on its effects in athletics and education at 7 p.m. in the new dorm lounge. The Last Lecture Series· will feature Germaine Bree, Kenan Professor of Humanities, in conjunction with the women's celebration at 8 p.m. Wednesday night.

Women and Their Feelings is

Evans Conducts

Costa Rica ·Trip

During Sununer The ninth annual sununer field

program of the Overseas Research Center will be held on the Limon coast of Costa Rica '·,·. beginning in May. Dr. David - · Evans, an

professor who has le~=~~~·:: expeditions into the T Rain Forest of Costa Rica, this year the group will live 'finca' or plantation on "·":.~·"''" deserted beaches of Pinta

There is no language pr(lble~;, he said, since the speak Englisb. Evans .............. work will be packed into course which offers four to credits. "Yet there will be for recreation like scuba diving as well," he said.

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Thursday will be the day of the Greek Week Sing, where each fraternity and society will put on a five-minute talent production beginning at 8 p.m. in Wait Chapel.

PATH Sponsors Benefit Undergraduates in good

physical condition may apply for enrollment before April 16. The trip begins May 19 when the group departs from Winston­Salem for Miami. The estimated cost is under $500, with several partial scholarships available.

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Salute:

I am Carlo Rossi. Yes, I am a real person. There is something special about Carlo Rossi California Chablis you should know. The grapes used are like people you care a lot about. They can cause you a lot of trouble -- believe me, there are many varieties that are much easier to grow than those in the Carlo Rossi wines -- but then comes that moment when it's all worth it.

For me, that time is tasting the wine. The Chablis is so clean and pure, right away you get the ~roma of those grapes in the glass, a promise of what lS to come. Then when you taste it ••. it's like a kiss from someone you love.

Carlo Rossi Chablis is made for you to enjoy as much as I do. Try it, and let me know -- if you're willing to kiss and tell.

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Friday will be Greek Week Field Day, in the field directly west of the Theta Chi house and the Reynolda Hall west parking lot. At 3 p.m., there will be a relay race and cross country event. At

. 3:30, the chariot race will begin. There will be two divisions for the tug-o-war: heavyweight (above 165) and lightweight (below 165). The tug-o-war starts at 4 p.m.

Friday night marks the Greek

A poverty meal to raise money for the underprivileged will be served Tuesday at 11: 15 a.m. in the Autumn Room of Reynolda Hall.

The meal is sponsored by People Allied to Terminate Hunger (PATH), a campus group organized to make the college community more aware of world poverty, according to Phyllis Rinehart, a PATH member, Circle K is co-sponsoring the

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event. . Rinehart said that the simple menu will consist of rice and beans, a meal representative of the daily diet of the underprivileged people of the world. The meal will cost one dollar with the proceeds going to the ComrnlUlity Hunger Appeal of World Church Services.

"The purpose of the meal is to make people realize how bad the poverty situation is in the world today," Rinehart said.

Evans said the focus of study for anthropology majors will be individual research on hypertension or a seminar on the .. problems of developing nations. He said students in other majors may .be sponsored by their departments on independent projects.

., .. ~ . .

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Page 3: Revision Emphasizes Appeals - wakespace.lib.wfu.eduApr 09, 1976  · Meiburg, Colleen M. Snavely, Jill E. MacKinnon, Katharine M. Amato, Rebecca J. MacMillan, ... served as a professor

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Send for a complete, up-to-date, computerized , listingof5cholarships.loans, fellowships, ~.grants · worth millions of doHars. __________ , ______ . _______________ __.._ __________ _

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scholar, ODK·irJitiateaad MOittir Hoard nominee, Job.n.soo;deftbed:~ his outlook for next year's·paper:­"[ hope to· Contin!le' tJie; Jqla'' standards of jounuililiar established by tbe OJd..fW!t:a..t' Bladi:; however, I alsO' bb(l!r.-~ make·. some changes ub:~ paper's pbysicaJ a~;; news coverage." ·

Brown has -worked · as· ar< photographer for an Uar .. pubfu:atiolls this. year. ~:ilnur F..nglisb major and also a ·MtiJtir Board nominee.

Johnson· and Brown' were' elected. by the Publicatiou; Board, which consists of r representatives . from· each'­publicaticm as well as faeultj:: advisors.

that all of us have WCilbd ewr· and night after day. and-~ producing a speeia1. Jdo4: i;lf-' theatre for our 9pfi!cial kbid: Of" audience" ·

"':~.

'i:i a ~~ r. f\ +: ( (;,.I 1::. - <::.

.. .-~ ,·~ .. ··>l .,

,.., AJ.T Bicentennial Bicycle Route

N.C. Department of Transportation officlals have. seW~ Nodll Carvllaa's fint ,en• zla­bieyele route.

:rtJe 608-mile course, lmOWII··as the BlcenteaaialBfey~.ftate.; raaa.fnm.deep wHJda,.tlle :, · J\ilpafacldaliMciUD'C8hitit3.tlieftasai.Outer1lallb.' TJds ioate Js.tlle flnt of five or smncll bleyde

I"01Ite5 to be designatetHhruugboat the state;

Bernard, Amos Go~ 'Foreign'

.~ "4 .. ~ ~ . .... ·:~~ .... ":o .... ~ -~ .... ~ . .... .. ... .... .... .... ~:--,.

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The language house set up for the summer session at Bernard Cottage has now been expanded into a full-year program,. according. to Mary LaBarre, Spanish instructor: Amos t:otta!le will also be ~ dior the program

:!! to.live there during the fall• and · Harry<KiJ~g for Spanish 8~ spring semesters. Applications . Aecordiog to LaBar~e. . should be turned in by Monday at· IDte~ested students ~ tJe:ti 3 p.m. to professors Francoiae·_ considered. for _adm~7: Hansberger for French and ~ty· m&JOI'S will be ~·

. prlort • ••

Anderson Speech Sia~ed' ;~ _ In the·houses the emphasis will

be on conversation in the foreign language; which will be spoken at all meals and in common rooms.· The houses, will also serve as seminar lounges and as settings for language club activities and for cultural events.

Jack Anderson, nationally syndicated cohunnist'and a wen.:. known investigative. reporter, will speak as part of tbe college union lecture series· in. Wilit Chapel Monday at 8 ·p.m.

"Each house," said LeBarre, "will · have resident native speakers,aremdenta~or,and a non-remdent faculty advisor."

Anderson bas been the instigator of a nmnber of expa s e:s · that have come out of

. Washington.

Applications . are · now. ~g accepted froin. students who wish

His investigative digging made. him tbe first tO report spying on law-abiding Americans by Jaw

POEMS· WANTED. THE NORTH CAROLINA SOCIETY OF POETS is ("tlmpiling a book t~/ poems. 'If )'Olt lwvt• written 11 JHn•m and Utould like fiUr .~ell•rtion rommillee to rt~Rifider it for tmiJlil'IUion, .~end your poem and a self­aclrirPs.~•·cl stamped enve/"1'"' to:

THE NORTH CAROLINA SOCIETY OF POETS:

"4 • 1st Union Bldg. Winston-Salem, N.C. 27101

~~~ •--./~I'HE AMIOUIIILITY L~

· a uni_que place to di~ in the NCNB Lower Plaza, •.

·'

. .. .... . .... '

enforcement· agencJeS; and:.lla; was also·tbe first to lliiCVVet CJ4: assasiDation· attempts OJ¢· foreign leaders. In 19'12 · he;:: received the. Pulitzer prize· b!: proving· that President RicJiald;,­Nixon and Secretary of ~- ; Henry Kissinger bad lied to;-tbe,: : Congress and public about u;e.. : u.s. tilt toward Pa!ristan in • ; IDdia-Pakistan conflict.. :

AdmiWnn to the lecture· will be-' ; one dollar with a student ID; aoa; 1 two dOHan for the public. en. ; officers said tbatthls yeat!s Jare· ;

· number of speakers nee 2 i'·W~ · ! a student admission price- Car : some of the speakers.

. Andemm also spoke in Wllit · Chapel in 1972. .,.. ________ --·. -.;: ~

........... _. .. ;!

.............. : •aile 1:: viii& ,.,.

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Bring Your Date . .. ROCKT·

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Best Place In Town- Music Every Night

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Page 4: Revision Emphasizes Appeals - wakespace.lib.wfu.eduApr 09, 1976  · Meiburg, Colleen M. Snavely, Jill E. MacKinnon, Katharine M. Amato, Rebecca J. MacMillan, ... served as a professor

_!_AGE FOUR Friday, Aprll9, 1976, OLD GOLD AND BlACK

• ... DEBORAH RICHARDSON Editor

I lark SCOIT BOTIENUS NANCY CONRADS Business Managers

''· RICHARD CARLSON CONNIE COLE BRIAN ECKERT Associate Editors

CHARLES JOHNSON Managing Editor

JULIA DRAKE MARK LEUCliTENBERGER

Assistant Editors

" ... and the truth shall make you free."

Wake Forest University, Winston-salem, North Carolina

Pass/Fail Some students may be using the

.,· pass/fail system to lighten their co~e. loads, but the majority are usmg rt as a valuable educt;tional

, ... ,~· tool. LL'Ite open curriculwn any ,.,~. !': progressive innovation in Ieanrlng is ·- ~.; •• ! · open to some abuse, but the entire

system should not be faulted for the . excesses of a few.

There is no doubt, as Dean Mullen said, that most students exercise their pass/fail options to venture into fields they would otherwise avoid. This is an important point since many people eventually choose their voca­tional fields from exposure to some

,.~n ~· ·course in college. And the grade la 1t.i pressure here is definitely great :.H ·' · ·enough to prevent students from tak­~~t', i'lg chances with unknown fields if

they must attempt them on a grade basis.

.. ' .· The argument that graduate "Schools do not favor pass/fail re-cords is one that should be considered by those students aiming for grad

~~ school. However, Wake Forest is not '·-'!'-

merely a training ground for those students and so should offer a pass/ fail system for the rest of its student P,OPulation. ~nsibility fo~ choosmg t!te nwnber of pass! ~ail ~ourses which will be acceptable m his future plans must lie with the student, not the university.

A system whereby a C is required to pass would also defeat the pur­pose of pass/fail. Requiring a C would ensure that only those students with a 3.0 average or letter would take pass/fail to prevent the C from pulling down their averages. Such a practice discriminates against the average student who consistently receives Cs and who would want to take a pass/fail course in which he might not be able to make a C.

Just because there is presently some abuse of the pass/fail system, there is no need to revamp the en­tire procedure. Pass/fail in its pre­sent fonn is an educational tool providing ·learning benefits to the student body.

-.:-~·· 01 , ODK. Discrimination ·~.~~ ~ I)

.... ;~" In an era when the national govern­... ~;·.: ment has taken great strides to end

sexual discrimination via Title IX, it is indefensible that the university's

~ male student leaders have chosen to -~~; ~~:F igno~e the dictums by refusing to ~ .. ·... admit women into their honorary

society, Omicron Delta Kappa. Al­though Dean Reece opposed ad­mittance of women, his voice is only one in the organization and the men themselves had to come to such a decision. The same men who have had so much to say in favor of Title IX's enforcement in housing, admissions standards, social regu­lations, and other areas have suddenly a balked at the idea of opening their exclusive club to women.

Mortar Board, on the other hand, has admitted men despite protests from some of its faculty advisers. Its members seem better able to recognize the hypocrisy in picking and choosing which of Title IX's guidelines the university will follow.

In all fairness, however, many people oppooed making both groups co-educational on the grounds that

both will eventually be weakened through competition for members in the long run. A merger, they say, would be a more reasonable alter­native. However, at the Mortar Board national convention called last fall to discuss this issue, lawyers pointed out that a Mortar Board-ODK merger on a national level was not feasible because many campuses do not have both organizations. Consequently, both ODK and Mortar Board voted at the national level to open their memberships to both sexes.

It was solely the decision of the Wake Forest ODK chapter to refuse to consider women for membership. That is not so surprising, how~ver, considering that the members could find only three junior men measuring up to their standards. Th~, next year's ODK chapter is left with the somewhat dubious legacy of a three­men membership; meanwhile Mortar Board will claim more that 20 participants, including the ODK three. Indeed, it appears that Ms. Cole is right when she contends that ODK IS only hurting itself by its blatant discrimination and viola­tion of the law.

I ~upp6se ~e r:aso~ #!e~ have suth a hard 41me reproducmg 1s because. -lnere i5 no ~a\e. ~& . .

Letters to the Editor

Graduati,on Speaker Provides' Suspense

Having embarked on a new spree of optimism,l'd first like to devote 30 seconds to silent recollection of the best features of Wake Forest. After that, lest the weight of such profound thought burden the reader's mind I'd like to thank those persons responsible fo~ m.aintainlng t!Je suspense over eiactly whom will be speaking at graduation and where it will be held. Furthermore, as always, I'd like

In This Corner

By D~UG ABRAMS

to add my own hwnble suggestions. . Had the speaker at graduation already been·

announced, we'd have the unfortunate diffi~ty of maintaining our composure knowmg that we'd have the privilege of

list~g ~ Alfred B. Tinkershell discuss the ramifiCations of codfish on etymology. And if

worse C!llt)e to! worse and as is rumored ' President l"ord arrived to forge through~ hours of irJcoherent jabberwocky, we might have a huee influx of early departures from Wake. .

1 Thus I feel it'~ in everyone's best interests

not to. lnlve the slightest idea what's • !Jappenmg about graduation. I've heard some ill-tempered souls complain that their parents· have mfested slime· $15,000 in Wake and deserve to witness our graduation. To them, I bave to say_ baloney. . ) · In the S8Jne. g9Qd spirit I'd like to make a few casual. suggestions about how the Ford sp~~h shC~uld tie handled. First, and most ~ntical, is to cUt down on the nmnber of msane a~ssins currently enrolled at Wake. As a Precautionary measure, I · believe everyone guilty or suspected of intervisation should. have to w~te 30011 times, "I will not assassmate President Ford."

Next, to prevent any disruption, students s~ould .we4t surgical masks to prevent any fnvol?us S}:leaking. Then, too, the graduation exerciSe slJould take place In Detamble and per~ps m)ght even include films of Ford's earlier speeches; thus we could be tbe first schoo~ to h~Jve a home movie as a graduation exercise.

Candidate Makes Apology B~ if Ford Insists on giving a personal

audi~ce, l'd like to see the graduation e~erc!Se held In the Magnolia Room Each parent could see one half of the exercise and wo~d have to sign a roster upon entering and leavmg.

Indeed, if necessary, students could come handcuffed to graduation and diplomas would be stuffed down their gowns. I do believe, howe!er, tl\at give~ Ford's oratory prowess and his sucQessful record of giving amazingly ~ul~ graduation speeches, that he should be mv1ted as a purely altruistic and selfless act by the university.

Almost with a sigh of relief, I can finally say soul dance. · that el~ctions for this year are history. No . It was a little over a month ago since I more s1gns, slogans or campaigns for at least eagerly awaited my first classical music ano~er two semesters. Although they are class, and now I must sound the warning bell behind us now, much of what was said and to future fine arts aspirants. What I believed don~ is hard to forget. Politics can be a nasty was going to be a gentle inkoduction to busmess not so much out of some direct music, turned out to be a cultural force-purpose on the part of the candidates but feeding. Even in the spheres of music I could rather as a by-~roduct of the situation. There not escape the rote memorization technique ar~ m~ny ~and1dates and only a few offices. upon which this college depends to educate. I This s1tuatmn can lead to fierce competition, experienced the "lemon-squeezer" learning -and .because o~ their competitive drive, approach (a tenn coined by T.S. Eliot to candidates do things that are only later to be describe people who believe that by tearing a regretted. Words once spoken can never be poem down to its essentials, ie., the verse was retracted.. in iambic pentameter, they will arrive at the

I now fmd myself a victim of my own essential meaning of the poemJ, and the un~hecked en~usiasm. I still unflinchingly experience of hearing Mozart's be&utiful adhere to the Ideals and principles of my composition, "Eine Kleine Nacht Musik" plat_form, but I question my methods. I so shredded into cadences, triple meter, and dedicated myself to my campaign that I sonata-allegro form, still induces a becam~ careless with the characters and "Clockwork Orange" reaction. I will never be repll:tabons of those p~rsons with which I was able to listen to Beethoven's "Apassionata" dealmg. The damage Is_ done; the words said. again without hearing the professor shout All that I now can do IS express my ~orrow out: "Here comes the syncopation!" And l and learn from my mistakes. only needed to glance around the room to see

The people elected to the different Student my fellow students wince as we heard Bach

important. What I hope for the community is a

sustained or renewed conviction that caring about and for someone or something beyond ourselves is even more important. With such a conviction, those searching for the freedom to express it will find it. There is no bidden agenda In those words. They are intended only to reflect my own belief that lives directed beyond themselves are the more nearly fulfilled and fulfilling lives. Such a belief is part of my own heritage as a Christian. I have had the joy of living here among many who give evidence of having the same or a very similar belief. To all of you, therefore, thank you for having made me feel at home. When I come back for a visit, I hope one of you can help fix my parking ticket. I'll try to do as much for you if you come to visit me in Raleigh.

Sincerely, Jake Viverette

Episcopal College Chaplain

. It d?es l¥ly heart good to know that 'no fm~ct~ c,ansideration came into play in the ~vers~ty ll decision. I can't think of another 1 ~mvers1ty Who would go to all that trouble JUst to let tne President of the U.S. return for an ~onora~ degree that the university failed to g~ve the fu-st time around. But' then, that's Wake Forest. at its best, always thinking about the fllelings of the little guy;

~tudent Attempts ·At Policy Challenge Doomed to Failure

Gove~m.ent. o~fices are all ~apable and hard dissected. A subject so beautiful as classical working md1v1duals. The time has come to music being introduced to a generation that Rhodesian .. Conflict

Unless thll attitudes of some administrators can be changed radically, the likelihood of student representative organizations successfully challenging administrative policies is noor. work together toward the goal we all hold in thrives on the heavy rock beat of a bass

collll_l1on .. The elections are history. It is best guitar, was destroyed daily in class. (Not to at this pomt ~o l~ve the past and look towa_rd mentio_n the agony o~ list~ning to the ~()NO : . Threatens Outbreak next year: .w1th smgleness of purpose. Uruty recordings an a prehistonc cassette player. I· · .. · · · · · ' ·-

Typifying the attitude of these administrators is Dean of Men Mark Reece

'• · who-made the following;con;unents: "I think J

one of the :;tumbling blocks we've had is -maybe it's !lever been put to you this way- a college commWlity is not a democracy .... The students don't have. the right to make rules and regulations that govern. their behavior. Everything we do should be educational -have some educational benefits - or we shouldn't d() it, no matter what it is. Of col,ll"se I know it's hard to make a strong argument for some thlngs like sports .... But if it's not educational--have some educational overtures-then there's no reason to have it."

and hard work are needed, and I now even began to think of static as classical) personally dedicate myself to that neeg: I am So, unless you are the type of individual who Of R, acial Stn• £e

Sincerely yours, D. Trigg James, ill

Ah, Humanities!

Ah, the Humanities! The noble goal to enrich the minds, and alleviate the cultural boorishness of the college student. 'The ~ery word "Humanities" conjures up the ideal ~ag~ o~ the Renaissance Man,. eagerly dnnking m all knowledge. It was with· this image in mind that I signed up for Humanities 111, believing this would be the cure for my cultural void in classical music; my prior acquaintance In this field of music consisted of a lone "Bethovan's Greatest Hits" albmn. Here was my opportunity to study the great masters who composed music that makes the

finds the beauty of a poem in the measure of J.• its meter, avoid this course at all costs.

Name withheld upon request.

University Thanked I hope you will grant me the space in the Old

Gold and Black to say thank you and goodbye to the Wake Forest University community. After almost nine years here, it is not altogether easy to leave for a similar position as·. Episcopal chaplain at N.C. State University !n ·Raleigh. Having moved from cheering for UNC-Chapel Hill (my own alma mater) to cheering for Wake Forest, I nevertheless think it will be a while before I start cheermg for N.C. State.

By SAM TSWANA Guest Columnist

Editor's Note: Sam Tswana is a Rhodesian student studying at Wake Forest.

Rhodesia, one of the richest and most well­developed nations in Southern Mrica, is smelling racial war. This country is composed of six million blacks and 270,000 whites. Surprisingly the whites rule the blacks although they are in the minority. Ian Smith, the prime minister, declared independence from Britain in 1965, and since that time Rhodesia, known to nationalists as Zimbambwe, has been crippled because of the United Nations sanctions which were imposed.

'l'ht~ f:hatierlmx By JACK NALES.U

. ,_,_ ..•... ·-

,,

Lounges Lower Status It is important to me to say that Wake

Forest University, born out of a Christian tradition somewhat different from my own (i.e., it comes out of a Southern Baptist tradition and I come out of an Episcopalian tradition), has made me feel welcome. I mean to include students, faculty, administration and staff when I speak of Wake Forest University. Having been here nearly a decade, I have seen a nmnber of changes and several different. student generations. I can remember compulsory chapel, for example, and the day when we· planted crosses in memory of the servicemen who had died in Vietnam, when some students · marched on President Scales' house and some students (maybe the same, maybe others) said they would have barricaded themselves inside Reynolda if they had not found it had too many doors to cover, when there were a lot of issues "out there" in addition to (or besides) the lntervisitation issue ''in here." Through it all, I have felt this to be a place where one had the freedom to care, ,whether about issues or about one another, and I am grateful for that. While I grant that all kinds of things (and, sometimes, people) can on occasion seem to interfere with that freedom to care or about the ways that freedom may be expressed, I sense that the freedom is still here, and that is

Unlike other black people In neighboring countries~ the nationalists of Rhodesia had strongly opposed racial conflict in favor of a peaceful settlement. But can that happen? Negotiation after negotiation was held, but all were In vain. Recently, every nerve of every nationalist was stimulated by the Constitutional Talks between Smith and Nkomo, the leader of the African National Council. However, Smith broke the talks and now the nationalists have called for intensified guerilla warfare.

Nowhere is the position of the student body better stated nor is there a better explanation for the futility of student action against university policy. If anything, campus orglinizations advocating changes most often meet with warnings of tighter regulations rather than any indication of change.

Not all Proposals have concerned strictly social policies, but all have met with the same fate. There is no reason the university should worry about injuries occurring in the dorms simply because there are no adequate fire systems or because some walls in the men's donns are ready to fall in; students have agreed in their room contract not to hold the university liable for any a!!cident or Injury.

Having failed in last year's effort to drive fraternities off campus, the administration has adopted a new strategy toward relieving overcrowded dormitories: it will drive away the independents.

It is a backwards strategy, but one that may nonetheless succeed. The new men's lollilges, ostensibly built to make life more tolerable for those of us without fraternity membership, are indeed a long overdue addition to the men's living space. There is a catch, of course, and this is where the strategy begins.

The lounges are degrading, or will be if the administration succeeds in its campaign to ~age conspicuous discrimination against the mdependent student. The lounges as they are envisioned reduce the independent to the status of a second class student for it is certain that the administration' will not tolerate the privileges permitted to fraternities.

The basis of this discrimination seems to be a theory that independents are social muta~ts, or perhaps more accurately, Franciscan monks. otherwise, rationalizes Dean .~ake, they would have joined fratermttes or the MRC where they might

1drink and party to their heart's content. The lounges will be set aside for those students an.d a.ctivities whic~ have nothing to do with drt~mg or partymg. This leaves a ver)\ senous qucstwn: what will the lounges be for? ·

Most likely, they will serve the purpose now assigned to the parlors of the women's donns,

but that does not really answer the question. The new lounges will be those spaces where, ~fter a long and grueling week of school, the mdependent student can retreat to do exactly w~at ~he administration expects of him. He w1ll s1t on the couch and fold his hands.

Between The Lines

By RICHARD CARLSON

Like the noble savage, the independent is saved from the evil practices of civilization. "There are a lot of kids here who have never drunk at all before they came to school," said Leake in last month's alcohol policy meeting. "The question is whether we should put these students into a climate where they'll be exposed to a lot of alcohol usage." Her answer to that question is no.

The only male student I have met on this campus who did not drink was a fraternity man. In any case, the decision will not be left with that ghostly, abstentious student body which is out there somewhere and which has never before raised a complaint about the lack of non-drinking facilities. Those of us who are independents have already been legally defined as non-drinkers.

In the meeting between students and administrators last month, it became apparent that the administration is indeed out

Found~d Jan~ary 15, 1916, as tiie student newspaper of Wake Forest University, Old Gold and Black 15 pubhshed each Friday during the school year except during examination, summer and holiday ~er•_ods as d•rec_ted by the Wake Forest Publications Board. Mailed each week. Members of the ~s~oc•ated _Collegoate Press, Represented for National Advertising by National Educational Advertosmg Scrv•ce, Inc. Subscription rate: $6.00 Second class postage paid, Winston-Salem, N.C. ~o~m 357; shoul~ be ma•led to Box 7567, Reynolda Station, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109. Printed by

m;!ey r: ubl•sh.ng Co., Incorporated, King, N.C. Opinions expressed on this page are not necessaroly those of the university or student body. ·

to save us. The campaign was begun by Chaplain Ed Christman who, apparently on his way to deliver a lecture on "Alcoholism in America" attended the policy meeting on the men's lounges by mistake, but gave the same lecture anyway.

That week, you may recall, was a high water mark in the campaign against immorality. The Housing Committee, off on its own campaign, was aghast to learn that a woman had been discovered standing on the outdoor stairs of a men's dormitory, In public no less. The girl was promptly punished with a revocation of her housing rights.

It is the independents who are now feeling the brunt of the prevailing moral reaction. Ironically, the lounges were built in part to provide more equal conditions . between men's and women's housing. The result is discrimination from another angle, and if the .independents take it sitting down, that is all they will ever do in their new lounges.

THE Fill£. PRINT

OH RiofETTJ RHE:iTj

StfAI. ~ !>tiALI-

Smith blindly broke the talks because he could not give room for majority rule In Zimbambwe. His policy of "No majority rule in Rhodesia during my life time" is an irrational policy, a policy which allows him to dig the graves for his own fellow white Rhodesians. I emphatically say this because racial war In this country is now inevitable. The balloon has been blown too far and is about to burst.

Smith is solely responsible for the racial war which now is knocking at the door of · every Rhodesian. Smith alone can choose between a peaceful settlement and racial bloody war. This hideous bloodbath could easily be avoided by granting majority rule in Rhodesia.

My heart is concerned about those souls who are daily victimized.

Student representative organizations bold few cards ill their campaigns to become parts of the decision-making process. The '

· administration, on the other hand; has an almost dictatorial power over policies governing the behavior of the student body. The latest strategy to weaken student proposals bas been to question the validity of I the organizations' representation as was done to the Men's Residence Council following its. efforts to establish a drinking policy in the new lounges ..

Although the probability of convincing the administration that students are mature and entitled_ to play some part- In the decision­making Process is small, it remains an essential Part of the problem students face before they can achieve the goals they seek. 1 ,

' '

I. I

'• .•

cir at 7:30 Tiger Monday Tuesday; Beard"

Man

and Monday DeTamble Hall.

The25 exhibit Germany in observance collection America House In center

lectures on Lear" at 8 Friday in Hall.

Ronald the Harrow the speaker.

Watkins here through his third to sponsored department Theatre.

Watkins interested in

Page 5: Revision Emphasizes Appeals - wakespace.lib.wfu.eduApr 09, 1976  · Meiburg, Colleen M. Snavely, Jill E. MacKinnon, Katharine M. Amato, Rebecca J. MacMillan, ... served as a professor

and of Ford's

be the first graduation

these Reece

"I think J

had is-

,,

•\

..

PAGE FIVE Friday, April I, D71, OW \iOLD AND ~~8:'8:!:'!t:.:!~:=:~::-;::::~~:~:::::::=~~~:;(<k!:'!:*::*'.:~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-;:::::>~::::::::·~.=~*:::~$~ '

IThis Week I Jazz Innovators- Expand Music OPERA WORKSHOP- Tonight and tomorrow at 8: 15.

. "Slow Dusk" by Carlisle Floyd and "Bastien and Bastienne" by Mozart. Advance tickets will be available

. at the music office, or they may be purchased at the door.

MARITIMERS-~Tonight and tomorrow at 8 in WFU pool. The theme is "Remember When ... ,': and admission is 75 cents for adults and 50 cents for children.

SPRING CONCERT-By the Concert Choir in Wait Chapel on Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m.

cu ·LECTURE --Jack Anderson, syndicated columnist, will speak in Wait Chapel at 8 p.m. Monday.

"NO EXIT"-A play by Jean-Paul Sartre will be performed by students of the School of the Arts Monday through Saturday at Sound Studio on the corner of S. Main and Vintage. Because of limited seating, call for reservations at 784-7843.

POPULATION LECTURE-Robert Shively of the Babcock Graduate School of Management will speak on "The Role of Management in Dealing with Population Problems," Tuesday at 8 p.m .• in Room C Winston.

WIND ENSEMBLE--In Wait Chapel at 8:15 Tuesday.

COLLEGE DEMOCRATS-Meetmg in the new dorin lounge at 7:30p.m. Tuesday. Lillian Woo will speak.

WOMEN'S cELEBRATION WEEK-Begins Tuesday. See related article for activities.

PSYCHOLOGY LECTURE-Joel Greenspan of UNC· Charlotte will speak on "A Potpourri of Applied Psychology," Wednesday at 4 p.m. in the psychology lounge.

.?'Two mus1c1ans performing "without batteries of electronic gadgetry typify the eclecticism of jazz in the 1970s with superb recordings.

Saxophonist Anthony Braxton and pianist Keith Jarrett have rejected electric instruments entirely while creating some of the finest and most innovative music of the decade. Jarrett's best work has come in strictly improvisational formats, while Braxton's work narrows tbe distance between composition and improvisation.

On "Five Pieces 1975" (Arista AIA064), Braxton and his quartet

. weave haunting improvisations around his avant-garde compositions. Numerical tiUes· like "G-647 (BNK·" and "489 M 70·2-·ITH·B)M" indicate the nature·of Braxton's music.

Yet his compositions are no evinces a solid melodic style perfect WJison. Cut three on side farther out than those of other while transfonnin~ the oiece with one is a startlingly effective jazz avant-gardists. In fact, someimprovisationoutsideofthe composition, beginning with Braxton's pieces are much more traditional chord structure. some free improvisation but pleasant than most music of this The band of Holland, trumpeter giving way to a solid bass and genre because of their rigid Kenny Wheeler and dr1!Jllmer drum pattern. Braxton alternates structures and impeccable ''11tonal shadings with the unison performances by his talented moruses. band. Jn One Ear Sidetwo'sfirstcut,a17-minute

Braxton, in his own l'igbt, is a composition, begins with a dirge-remarkably talented reedman like introduction from Braxton's who plays alto and sopranino By CHARLES JOHNSON reeds and Wheeler's trumpet. saxophones, clarinet, flute, alto· Some soranino sax squa·wking is flute and contrabass clarinet on ..,._~~!!"' ___ ~-~-_, unpleasant, but Wheeler adds a the album. Barry Altschul includes the best chilling, military solo, and

Though much of his work of current ~vant-garde talent. Braxton improvises effectively consists of disjointed staccato Wheeler sparkles in duets with on clarinet around Holland's bass runs which sometime give way to Braxton, while the remarkable in the piece's nicest segment. unmelodic squawks, Braxton rhythm of Holland and Altschul Each of the five pieces is pro:ves he can play lyrically O'l reveals the rigid structure of strange and haunting, and they the standard "You Stepped Out or Braxton's seemingly free-form rely greatly on the mood of the A Dream." The cut features only pieces. listener. Braxton on alto and David On two tracks, Braxton and Braxton's music is not for Holland on bass, and Braxton Wheeler play staccato lines in everybody; in fact, it is probably

Springsteen Fulfills Role A Review

By STEVE FUTRELL

Bruce Springsteen's first appearance in the South was an ecstatic one for both himself and the audience. Screaming in delight "Ya crazy or something?", Springsteen lived up to the reputation of being one of rock's best live performers.

Once hailed as the "future of rock 'n' roll," Springsteen appeared willing and able to fulfill that role at his concert in Cameron Indoor Stadimn on the campus of Duke University.

Backed by the consistently tight and moving &Street Band, he ('Oaxed the generally contr~lled Duke audience to dancing in the aisles. .

Opening with "Tenth Avenue l<'reeze-out," he proceeded to do the rest of the "Born to Run" album, an old manified Mann tune, and a few cuts from his two earlier albums, "Greetings from Asbury Park" and "The Wild, the Innocent, and the E-Street Shuffle."

In the two encore sets, the band rocked the standing crowd with a series of old Detroit Wheels tunes, closing the night with the

venerable classic "Prisoner of Rock 'n' Roll."

Brandishing the city street­punk image, Springsteen was able to portray a wide range of characters and emotions: the detached park-observer, the &ide­desperate junkie, and the over­aged hoodlmn.

Springsteen has been able to combine the best elements of 25 years of rock 'n' roll. He mixes its most important ambivalences and opposites: the need to grow up and the desire to stay young; total, uninhibited exuberance and fearful stand-offishness; the hard-driving rocker and the crooning balladeer.

"Born to Run" lp, provides the constant rhythm and drive necessary for power rock and roll like Springsteen's.

Most notable among the "soft stuff" were the moving "Meeting Across the River" and "Jungleland." It was with these that he generated the most audience identification with stories abput last-ditch attempts at youthful love and the realization of the emptiness of adolescent dreams and visions.

only for a very few. Though his bizarre compositions are not always pleasant to bear, they possess a powerful emotional· force in their mesmerizing tension between form and improvisation.

Some observers have called Braxton the new Charlie Parker or the new Coltrane, but his playing does not yet merit such acclaim. Nonetheless, he is the most influential saxophonist playing today, and his imaginative work as a composer stamps him as one of jazz's most influential figures in this decade.

Jarrett is better known as a performer, and his music is much more accessible than Braxton's. His best work relies on the improvisational synthesis he can create in a variety of settings.

"The Koln Concert" (ECM l 064-65) is his most recent solo recording, and it shows fully his development as one of jazz's premier pianists in its remarkable blend of Jarrett's diverse influences-avant-garde,

· bebop, blues, classical and even gospel.

Recorded live at the opera in Cologne, Germany, the two­record set features Jarrett alone at the piano. It is a supreme tribute to Jarrett's improvisational skills that two records of unaccompanied piano music don't contain a single boring moment.

His synthesis skillfully

captures every facet of the instrument, and his moods range from soft and elegaic to awesome and threatening. Jarrett evinces his enthusiasm in moans and sighs which ·captured in the expertly produced by Ma1lfred,, Eicher.

The album has more matwity and clarity than Jarrett's three­record masterpiece of 1973~ "Solo-Concerts," and together the two sets form an incredible offering of piano performances.

But only a small part ~f Jarrett's work is done alone. He usually plays with an experienced quartet, and his most recent group album, "Backhand," is another foray into the uncharted areas of group improvisation, though it is less satisfying than his solo '!"ork.

, He has also composed music for orchestra and lax:ger groups, and an album featuring Jarrett and his large-scale compositions, "In the Light," was recenUy released for the first time in an American pressing:

Jarrett is a dynamic and increasingly influential young pianist, and no artist recenUy has turned out so much nlaterial of uniformly excellent quality. He and Braxton ate the most promising musical forces in jazz to emerge in this decade.

Burgess To Direct

Wind Perfor~nance LAST LECTURE SERIES-Germaine Bree will speak

in the main lounge of Reynolda Hall at 8 p.m. ' Wednesday.

· Previn Directs Superb Concert

Though it is difficult· and somewhat unfair to single out any single part of such a tighUy­woven whole, Clarence Clemons (wind ensemble supreme) and "Miami Steve" van Zandt (lead guitarist) were particularly vital members of the E...Street Band.

His rockers, however, made the night complete. The popular single "Born to Run," in­terestingly placed in the middle of the two-hour set, climaxed that half and forced the audience to be even more demanding for the remainder of the concert. The show closed with "Rosalita," from the "&Street" lp, and it proved to be one of his catchiest and most likable melodies.

The university Wind Ensemble will present its annual spring concert at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in Wait Chapel.

visting lecturer in· music literature. The university Flute Quartet will play "Jour D'ete A La Mongagne" by Eugene Bozza.

UNIVERSITY THEATRE--"Comedy of Errors" begins Wednesday and shows are April14-17, 19-24.

BICENTENNIAL RETROSPECTIVE CONCERT­Piano students of School of the Arts instructor Clifton Matthews, will play works by Richey, Saridresky, Ives and Griffith. Show starts at 8:15p.m. in Crawford Hall Wednesday.

THURSDAY' MORNING'"WORSHIP:..af '11-·a.m .. m­Dav1s Chapel.

INTERVARsiTY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP--The Rev. Paul Curtis will speak on "Guidance" in Davis Chapel Thursday at 5 p.m.

CU FLICKS--''Mean Streets," tonight and tomorrow at 7:30 and 9:30 in DeTamble Auditorium· "What's Up Tiger Lily?" at 8 p.m. Sunday; "Thro~e of Blood" Monday .at 8 p.m.; "The Bad Sleep Well" at 8 p.m. Tuesday; "Yojimbo" Wednesday at 8 p.m.; "Red Beard" on Thursday at 8 p.m.

Mann Photo Exhibited An exhibition of photographs

from the life and career of Thomas Mann, German novelist and critic, will be shown 9-5 Monday through Saturday in DeTamble Gallery of Tribble Hall.

The 25 panels in the Mann exhibit were assembled in Germany in 1975 for a centennial observance of Mann's birth. The collection is being shown in America through the. Geothe House in New York, cultural center for the German

government. Mann's first novel,

Buddenbrooks, brought him fame when it was published in 1900, and he received the Nobel ·Prize in Literature in 1929. The Magic Mountain, probably his best known novel, was published in 1924.

Among his other books was a collection of political essays denouncing fascism. He left Germany in 1933 and later came to the United States, returning to Europe in 1952. He died in 1955.

'King Lear' Series Slated · An authority on the

Elizabethan theatre will give five lectures on Shakespeare's "King Lear" at 8 p.m. Monday through Friday in Room A of Winston Hall.

Ronald Watkins, formerly of the Harrow School in England, is the speaker.

Watkins will be in residence here through April 24. The visit, his third to Wake Forest, is sponsored by · the English depanment and the University Theatre.

Watkins has long been interested in the methods by

which Shakespeare's plays were staged in the Elizabethan theatre and has directed many of the plays at Harrow on a specially constructed stage. His books include one On Producing Shakespeare and several volumes in Shakespeare's Playhouse Series.

During his stay at the university, which began Sunday, he has lectured at the North Carolina School of the Arts and will work with the University Theatre and will speak at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

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A Review By AL FITZGERALD

The culture-starved horde that descended on Wait Chapel March 25, left with very few of its members disappointed. The event was the long-awaited appearance of the London Symphony Orchestra, the top attraCtion of this yearls Artists Series.

Generally acknowledged as one of Europe's finest. the orchestra lived up to its reputation. Conductor Andre Previn and his talented group came through with a thrilling performance.

The program for the evening included "Variations on the St. Anthony Chorale" by Brahms, Roy Harris' "Symphony No. 3," and Tchaikovsky's "Symphony No. 4." All were admirable performed, but the renditions of the Harris and Tchaikovsky compositions were perhaps the most memorable.

The concert opened with a precise performance of the Brahms selection, one that made the maturity and control of the orchestra immediately evident. But it seemed metronomic after the · orchestra began its

passionate performance of Harris' work. Harris' music has been described as "rugged and sometimes almost clumsy whilst possessing a forthright open-air quality which makes it uniquely bracing." This performance was a perfect illustration of that statement.

After intermission, the orchestra returned to devote the entire second 'Italf of the performance to Tchaikovsky's "Symp~ony No. 4 in F Minor." The Russian composer's melodic and accessible music provided a nice contrast to Harris~ brooding study.

"Symphony No. '4" is fun. The Third Movement is unique, featuring pizzicato strings throughout. The interwoven Russian folk theme is always a pleasant surprise, and the finale is wonderfully spirited. Musical academicians denounce much of Tchaikovsky's work, deeming it too facile and too popular. Previn and the orchestra made this Fourth Symphony enjoyable and significant.

Previn was in complete control throughout the evening and conducted in his casually­controlled style, memorable for the fine music it creates.

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Oemons' ability to blend the various styles and emotions of the songs makes him the crowning addition to the band. "Miami," who joined the band after the actual recording of the

Jumping convulsively with arms flailing wildly, Springsteen seemed to be air-boxing the world and beating off the sadly inevitable end of youth, of growing up, and of the vitality of rock 'n' roll.

Davidson Burgess, director of bands, is conductor of the 48-member student ensemble.

The concert will include a performance of "Variations on a Hymn by William Billings" by Dr. Karl Doreger, director of the Moravian Music Foundation and

John Fulcher, percussion instructor, will be featured soloist for the first movement of Paul Creston's "Concertina for Marimba and Band." The program also will include works by Mendelssohn, Alexander, Jager, Tull and Delio Joio.

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Page 6: Revision Emphasizes Appeals - wakespace.lib.wfu.eduApr 09, 1976  · Meiburg, Colleen M. Snavely, Jill E. MacKinnon, Katharine M. Amato, Rebecca J. MacMillan, ... served as a professor

"£ PI Jl't..., ..... ,.~OIDGGU»AND•.tca:

Buggers Host Tournament lltMARY McNEIL

OGBa.py Abalyllt

O.liandnd and sixty Rugby pl&,.n frum eight clubS wm. CCIIIWellJe' upoo tbe upper athletic fields tomonuw for tbe second ...t Wue Forest lllvitatiollal RIPJ·Toamament beginning at 1 ..... naning throughout tile day. 'l1ie rmals will follow on SIMid&T.

1 Capllins of teams from N.C. ·~ tile· University of Nortb a.111iM.. Duke. Wake Fomt,

Buc:kneB. Danville, and Cape Fearwillmeetat 9:00todraw for matcll-ups in the first rounds of play. Eight games will be played during tbe day, four games on eaeh of the two fields, to· begin at 10, 12:, 2 8lld 4 respectively.

lnadditiontothese games, two girls Rugby teams, the Reedy Creek team from Raleigh, and the Motller Rackers from WiDiam and· Mary, will play an exhibition matdt at noon.

''Last year. 8IJO.!IOO people were out tbere wakbiDg the games,"

MeAT REVIEW COURSE. givea 011 u . .,..,Jdual basis ia AU..ta •,etae ...... Marell or April. Tile- CNile ~Hies 5. dayu. F• illformatiea: P.O. Box· TltM. Au.ata. ~ 3t30t pbene <4MJ 174-%114.

said Wake Forest ro-captain Dani!!l "We're separated into for· most of . these: teams, .. George Daniel. "This is only the two distinct, strong. teamaDOW~ It commented. DanieL. ••ft1lgby · second tournament at Wake wouliJ be Dice if.'We met in tbe toumameuts· are-:planned .to -be . For~st and already people are final 'bat its bard.to· foresee mat· flin.bfotaaae you gl!t to.see people. t·:~lhn~ us and aslri'll! tu happening." you~ve. played; tlltuughoUt the . participate. Obviously, tms is 6 A: lot depends upon which yeal"itgaia.'" · very~UtiP-.phtrtf~." teamsfaceeaclrotherilltbefirst Differentfiom·participants in

This year a PA system will. ~ round· accordillg to Daniel. QqJe- other· sports, Rllgby players set-up on the field in conjunction Fear and·'Danvilfe· appeer·to· be come togetller. sacially after with the scort>board tu keep the weakest teams awUhua. tbe . CC1111peting·on~tl!efield;. 'lbe Wake spectators better informed on the most desired to go· up. against Forest IDvil•li•wl. tournament rules and penalties of the game early. promises· to< contillae the and no admission will be A consolation braeket will be trad!ficm· ApartyJ~~ charged. played along witk· regular bas been plamled.satm:day ~

Wake Forest. N.C. State and tournament advancement. at the West &Ill Comm itJ. Duke are considered top : Losers from tbe first'roaod- :will· Center. con~ers for the champioosbip.. . m....t in mn!llllatinn !lf!'ini.rmal~ at. N.C. ~ wo!l last .year by_· 2'andhlmJgwilh111uiwsfnm "ldon'tknow·ofanyothersport~ defea~ UNC m the finals. but. fir~t roamd.wblisegameswillbe where·yougo.oatand:tryto·beat Wakes 111-3-1 record places~ played. at the- same time on each oCber up Oll!:·tbe. field amt· as strong contenders for the title. differeut fields. tben forget it. and party togetber Duke has been the only team to 'I1lill will. ~ that a team afterwards. I gpes&: Ulat's why I beat the Deacons during regular . will not be out , of competition ;:~the game; so much," said · seaSOn play. . after the fll'St l1IUild. Each team

The Deacons plan to enter both will' ba.ve the opporbwit) to play: W'lth an a~·~ tba~ few a gold and black team in the two . matches. Fillals in both: ob:R"ers ·will:: be- disappointed tournament. brackets will begin· on Sunday ... • this ~eocL Gaod Rugby· and

"We're in as good a coote!Jtion '"Ibis is the· end of .fl.. rugby. good sp~more could: a.

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'Dds weekelld marla! die rqhnlnatlcm of tile ...... - tile: Wille: ......,. aa .•. Ill;. ammaHnvitatkmal Toumam.ent. .._..,Y_..

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Wake can

you The subject · and the ability · is leadership. to perform under TIJeoourse pressureare is Army unportant. The ROTC. The people who entire cur· demonstrate riculum is these qualities exciting, challenging, and are the people we want to flexible. So flexible that; if become Army officers. qualified, you can enter at As an Anny officer, any time during your first you will not only have to two years on campus. manage people but money

Through practical and materials as welL To experience, you will learn make more important plan-how to lead. The acquired ning decisioosthan most discipline of mind and spirit young executives ..

At Wake Forest, you can learn what it takes to lead. CALL: Major Cook 72!).9711 Ext. 331

STAFF

WARREN STEEN PAUL RICCI RICK ARCHER CAROL PULLEKINES TOMMIE O'TOOLE! MARK OLSON LANE ALDERMAN

Sports Editor

Golfers Continue Streak; Haas, Strange In Masters.

Thirty-seven strokes separated the Wake Forest Golf Team from its nearest competitor last weekend as the Deacs swept to a victory in the Big Four Tournament. The first place finish was the fifth consecutive Big Four title for Wake, and

: continued the Deacons' string of • tournament victories to a school record nine.

Second year golfer Bill Cbapmau. : ~QC!k the . individual '' 'lh~t\t~na'~~a ·last c. • 1'0Uild .... sco1'1!··rss. ·crutpman's four round total of 289 placed him three strokes ahead of second place finisher, Tim Saylor of Wake Forest.

Senior David Thore and junior . Bob Byman finished deadlocked

for fourth place in last weekend's four school event, and sophomore Scott Hoch finished tenth to round out the Wake scoring.

Despite the fact'that the Deacs rolled to a 37 stroke victory, the two top members of the club were absent from the tournament lineup. Both Jay Haas and Curtis Strange were in Augusta, Georgia preparing to play in this week's historic Masters Tournament Haas and Strange, both NCAA champs, were among a handful of amateurs invited to play in this top professional event.

... _.

Jay Haas

On Wednesday, the day before the Masters opened, Haas demonstrated his ability by winning a nine hole, par three exhibition against the Masters field. Haas posted a score of 21 in.· capturing the victory.

Speaking about his team's· perfonnance last weekend, Wake Golf Coach Jesse Haddock said, ''!had to bepleaSedthatwewere able to perform that way without Jay and Curtis. Both N.C. State and North Carolina have been· nationally ranked this season and I thought that our team met the challenge extremely well." ··

Curtis·Strange ·

The entire Wake team~ wm: regroup: next weekend as they. seek· to· defend· their· Atbm_tic Coast COnfermce CiJiunpionship. Deacon. teams_ have; wmL t1iat event flir'the,pastnine'seaerms,. and will. be the heavily favumli to·.· come home with the tentb straight win.

Last weekend•s . Big Four triumph marked tbe tweuty­SU!ODd tournament title· for tlie· Deacons in twenty-six· tournament appearances. over ·. the last three · years.. In · no· tournament during: that. period· has Wake Forest: finished belOw second.. Included. in. ·tbat string. are the;.Deacs two· first p)ace finishes . in · the NCAA Champio.nsbip Tournament.

Much like the· team's· impressive recm:d~ jD:DiDr· OJrtis: Strange has found blinseJf iJI,the . midst. of an excellent streak.. In his seventeen' consecutive tournaments he bas· never. finished below ninth ·place.: He will be the defendingrhampion .in . the upcoming ACC tourney; but

·history will be against him. repeating. Nci one . has captured back-to-back conference. titles· since Ronny Tbilmas of Wake Forest won the t;hampioosbip outright in 1959 and tied · Maryland's Dean Beman for the · crowu ·in 1960.

Go Deacs

:-.·Bas{ . ByPAUL

StaffW

Wake Forest·~ will be out to g1

·( . . . weekend as theJ . 'I . foes Virginia anc

of whom ha· knocked off t Deacons.

fpe Terrapin. a!acs 8-4 on MB Shore Field to Merle Henkel hi the team its fir~ Y;ifgigla continu Ul~ ..-!'iext day l

,_,. Dl!lics and fre Scott Austin a getting the Deac start on their schedule.

After that beginning, the cl1 its annual sprinE and returning to with an impress The streak assUI ·of a winriing seast such a feat accomplished by baseball team in T.he 1964 squac

Women~

The Wake Fore! Team ~hould 1M favorites at

·j Tournament toda: at the Duke Uni

~ ..

. I

h

The Lady competed in fou this year, wim finishing second • another. Both wi were Wake Fore1

·~ with the Deacor first by 23 strokes by an 11-shot ma and a 15-stroke

.....

De a Facf

By BILL ·StaHl

The vastly iJ Forest Men's Tel its 16-5 recorc matches with UN this week, in~ wh most important year::~"'"dfcipp match iit 'a hE Virginia, the sqw: three straigh1 victories, il magnificent co1 win over stron befor.e a parti. crowd in Raleigl On the next d chopped down tht University of Ric trip to Maryland t1 home match ag1 Institute on Tues will compete Tournament, on t April 16-18.

John Hill, who two singles for believes that the: strong showing Tourney. "We've· matches, but anyll in the tourney. I

· .. moot important fat success there, and

· ·. have a well-balan . related. "The fa·

,: almost healthy nt ~, The Deacs ha, ; problems with

·· . season, with both one and five playei

·' of the season. T '· Czarnecki and Chu• . · playing again, B

their fonn. With th • squad has bE

••

"TENNIS INl playtug and t4 (703) SCB-2064, i

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Page 7: Revision Emphasizes Appeals - wakespace.lib.wfu.eduApr 09, 1976  · Meiburg, Colleen M. Snavely, Jill E. MacKinnon, Katharine M. Amato, Rebecca J. MacMillan, ... served as a professor

; .·;

(

• '

\ \

f.·.~

Baseball F ..... ~ Big Week

. ,

. ByPAULRICCI Staff Writer

Wake Forest's baseball squad will be out to gain revenge this weekend as they challenge ACC

. 'I . foes Virginia and Maryland; both of whom ha·ve previously knocked off the high-riding Qeacons. .

rPe Terrapins defeated the · · · a!acs 8-4 on March 26 at Ernie

Shore Field to give lefthander Merle Henkel his first loss and the team its first ACC blemish. YJrgiJ,Iia continued the invasion ~ll ... ~ext day by ·handing the

•r OOtics and freshman pitcher Scott Austin a tough 1-0 loss, getting the Deacs off to a rough start on their spring break schedule.

After that disastrous Merle Henkel

American · Bill Scripture, compiled a 23-7 mark with a second~place finish in · the

losses on the spring trip were to defending ACC champion Clemson, and an 8-7 loss ::to Carolina on Tuesday dipped Wake's conference mark to 2-5 • The Deacs outhit the Tar Heels ten to flve,.but eight·walks and several costly errors did them in. · Henkel got the team back to its winning ways on Wednesday, howt-11er. as he fashioned· a three­hi!: 5-0 · shuto•Jt over the Catdlllounts or Wt~m Carolina. Th, vfcto1·:; upped the ace's 1976 mark to 7·2, and left the Deacs at 17-7. .

beginning, the club rebounded on its annual spring trip, going 4-2 and returning to Winston..saiem with an impressive 16-6 record. The streak assured the Deacons of a winriing season, the first time such a feat has been accomplished by a Wake Forest baseball team in a dozen years. T.he 1964 squad, lt~d by All-

conference. i . Despite the ama1~mg

turnaround by the Diam.ond Deacs, the inability to win in >.the ACC has been a disappointing aspect of the te:un's season. BOth

l:lead Coach Marvin Crater hopes for· more ACC success against Viiginia and Maryland this weekend and in next week's season-ending encounters with Carolina and N.C.· State. The Deacs travel to. Raleigh on Tuesday to face. the Wolfpack and. return to Ernie. Shore Field on Thursday and Saturday to host return contests against Carolina and State. Crater's charges Will have to prove they can Win in ~e conference before the annwil ACC Tournament statts on April

·Gridders Open Spring Drills 22. .

'

Women's Golf in State Tourney ·

OG&B Sports In Short The Wake Forest Women's Golf· UNC. Number one V:~J Scott, tournament If the University

Team ~hould be one of the claimed medalist honJrs 111 the. :· agrees to finance the trip. To favorites at the: State· first Invitational with a 76 and :qualify, the squad would have to Tournament today and tomorrow freshman Linda Satler ·took · win the State Title, and maintain at the Duke University course. second in the second with an 82. ·each individual's sub-85 average.

The Lady Deacs have "We should come out of the T k \T·. ' 3 1 competed in four tournaments. State Tournament on top," said rae eam ..

. this year, winning two and Scott. "We've beaten every team · finishing second out of seven in in North Carolina and Virginia, ' Virginia. Military Institute another. Both wiiming contests UNC has been the only state team handed the Deacon trackteam its were Wake Forest Invitationals, to defeat us this year, and we fdrst loss last Tuesday by .a score

·~ with the Deacons winning the beat them on three other ol: 84-61. In winning, VMI swept first by 23 strokes and the second occasions." oo~th hurdle events and placed by an 11-shot margin over Duke The team could possibly .firist and second in the pole vault, and a 15-stroke margin over advance to the national the; 440 yard dash, and the long

jun\ip ..

Deac Netmen Face ACC Test

By BILL BLOSS · S1aff Writer

strengthened, and is starting to come into its own.

While hordes of Wake students The vastly improved Wake were on Florida beaches during

Forest Men's Tennis team takes Spring Break, the team went on a its 16·5 record into crucial southern swing and compiled a &­matches with UNC and Macyland 1 record. Dealing losses to this week, in what could be the Clemson and Harvard, among most important matches of tile .. o!)t~)he team's only setback yei¥f::~e):""<froppiiig1ti1irst A~" "eame .aflhEtluinds-of"the strong

W'alt Thompson of Wake Forest was a triple winner, taking the 100 ,and 200 yard dashes and anchllring the mile relay team. The Deacs also placed both first and second in the javelin and the three linile run. In tbat distance event, freshmen Mike Tyner and Kevin Amigh crossed the. finish line· together to take those top . spots. ' .

Wake .. Forest now posts a 3-1 record, having captured victories over Washington and Lee, Davidson, and High Point.

Cbuck Mills' fourth year at Wake Forest began last week as the Deacon football team opened its spring workouts.

Mills and company look towards the upcomiJig season with a, great deal of optimism Wake's first real competitive season since 1970 occured last year and Wake re­turns players at numerous posi· tioDS. ·

Tbe ~workouts give Mills a chance to integrate into the Wake syBtem ~unior college play· ers who didn t play last season as well as look at the returners from last season. , The workollts culminate April 24 with the Black and Gold game.

OG&BNames

Sports Editors Three sophomores were named

to executive sports positions on the Old Gold & Black for next year.

Tucker Mitchell, from Greens­boro, N.C. will take over the editor's spot and will receive assistance from Mark Olson and Tommie O'Toole.

Olson hails from Falls Church Va. while O'Toole is a native of the Gaithersburg, Md. area.

match in a heart-breaker to University of Florida. In Virginia, the squad has reeled off addition, the "full-time tennis" three straight conference aspect of the trip enabled Coach victories, including a Jim Leighton. to help his players magnificent come-from-behind inQividually. Many credit the win over strong N.C. State, immensely popular Coach with befor.e a partisan Wolfpack the team's good play and recent crowd in Raleigh last Monday. success. In turn, the squad has On the next day, the team given Leighton one of his most chopped down the unit from the successful seasons and is .on the University of Richmond. After a way to try to close out the season trip to Maryland tomorrow, and a on a bright note in the ACC home match against Hampton · Tournament.

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their form. With their return, the • squad has been greatly

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Page 8: Revision Emphasizes Appeals - wakespace.lib.wfu.eduApr 09, 1976  · Meiburg, Colleen M. Snavely, Jill E. MacKinnon, Katharine M. Amato, Rebecca J. MacMillan, ... served as a professor

.-:-PAGE EIGHT FridaY, APriJ 1,117t, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Law Grades Overruled ''

Water Ballet. Underway By BILL ROEBUCK

Staff Writer

· ' Fall semester grades for the -• Negotiables Instrwnents class at ·- the Wake Forest law school have

another 40 received Ds. The law students' complaint wasn't with the exam itself so much as with the manner in which it was graded. Bell explained that the exam was graded on the basis that anything wrong was marked off, even if within a selection of possible answers, the correct answer was also chosen.

been changed, following an _ appeal by disgruntled students who said the original grading of the exam was unfair.

According to a story published in the Winston..Salem Journal March 28, the Jaw students have ·also raised a sizable amount of money which might be used to

One student said that the grading of the exam was different from anything he'd ever had before. "We were penalized more for a wrong answer than rewarded for a right one," he said.

. , . hire an outsider rather than have ·:the same professor for another ·course next fall. After an appeals to Bowman, a

hearing with three law professors, and a unanimous faculty ruling in Bell's favor, the students appealed to President James Ralph Scales and Provost Edwin Wilson.

· · No decision has been reached on what will be done next year. Pasco M. Bowman, dean of the law school, was quoted in the Journal as saying, "We'll have to decide in the next month or so who will teach Wills next fall. But for now we'll just wait and see if the hard feelings subside a litUe bit."

Scales was quoted as saying, "They gave a well-presented appeal. It's only necessary to compare the records of these students in college and law school with their grades in this course to see the discrepancy."

· Professor Richard G. Bell, who taught the Negoitable Instruments course, called the course difficult, explaining that it was one of the first courses of its type that law students faced. "It doesn't come easy. Just reading through it doesn't work. This is an integrated code and a lot of students don't have the background to understand it at frist."

After a meeting in mid-March between Scales, Wilson, Bowman, and Bell, a compromose was reached. It was decided that each student would be allowed the option of taking the course pass-fail. The P or F would not be computed in the student's class rank, though the original grades would remain in the law school files.

According to the Journal story, about 12 of approximately 12S students failed the exam and Bell's initial reaction, as

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Petitions for Honor Council and Student Judicial Board positions may be picked up Tuesday in the SG office and the information desk. Petitions will be due April 20at5p.m.

Two representatives will be elected from each class for Honor Council. Ten representatives will be elected at large for student Judicial Board.

The registrar's office bas re­que.:.:ted that each student verify his schedule for this tenn by picking up his midtenn grade report today. There have been discrepancies noted between midtenn rosters that the com­puter prints out and registration and droJHidd material filed by students in the Office.

students should be aware that a faculty regulation stipulates that a grade may not be asigned for what the computer says is an unregistered course. Also,~ grade of F must be assigned to a stu­dent who registers for a course and does not attend, failing to drop the course.

Came TAPE RECORDERS

The Red Cross Bloodmobile will be taking blood donations in the gym Tuesday 11 a.m. to 4:30p.m. Tuesday's goal is 200 pints, accordin.!t to a Red Cross spokes­man, 16 more than were collected in the October drive here.

Approximately 20 students are needed to serve as counselors during the 36th annual session of North Carolina Boys' State which will be held on campus June 13-19. Male students in the under· graduate, graduate, and profes­sional schools will be considered for the positions.

Counselors will be given re­muneration and free room and board. Applicants should contact Dr. Jack Fleer in the politics dePartment, room 302 C, Tribble.

Any students who would like to work in Reynolda Gardens this summer under the College Work· Study program may contact Tom

Urban Services Referral Bureau invites all students interested in being on its staff next year to meet the present staff for inter­views at 9 p.m. Monday in Reynolda 202.

Openings exist for several pro­gram coordinator positions. Re­sponsibilities of these ~tions­include recruiting and pla~t of volunteers, maintaining contact with various area organizations which use volunteers, and assisting in various campus-wide projects. For more information call Doug Murray at 724-5789.

The Circle K Club, with the assistance of the Arcadia lions Club, will hold an eye will drive 9-5 Wednesday in one of the Reynolda reading rooms. The North Carolina Eye and Human Tissue Bank is also cooperating in this project. ·

Last year, the Circle K­sponsored project netted about 150 eye wills from university particiJ)ants.

Tri Beta will have a plant sale Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Winston main lobby.

Pawn S!,op, Inc. .422 N. Liberty St.

Cassettes from 5 19.95 Reel Tape from $69.95

35 MM CAMERAS from 529.95

~UITARS _ Electrics from 524.95 Accoustics from s19. 9 5

The Center for Psychological Services will sponsor a Women's Week activity Tuesday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. A full schedule of sur­prises is planned.

Production Ooses·Era In a finale production for Studio

8 East, University Theatre will present William Shakespeare's "Comedy of Errors," beginning Wednesday night. The perfonnance will mark the end of the theatre housed on the top floor of the library ,leaving future productions to be staged in the new Fine Arts Center.

"Comedy of Errors," inspired largely by Palutus' "The Menaecmi;" involves a series of mistaken identities when two sets of long-parted twins arrive by chance in the same town.

The play will be set in 111 circus and the characters costumed as various circus people. Dr. Harold Tedford, director, said that the circus setting "opens .doors fol)' reinforcing the play through comic devices.

"We expect the audience to become involved in the swirl of activity of the circus/' added Tedford. " 'Comedy of Errors' lends itself to the free-wheeling mood of the circus."

Heading the cast are Mark Leuchtenberger ~:~,s Solinus, McCoy Hill as Egeon, Stuart Gordon as Antipholus of Ephesus, Mark Schurmeiel" us Antipholus of Syracuse, Rid• Carlson as Dromio of Ephesus, Don MacQueen as · Dromio of Syracuse, Jeari, Moore as Adriana, and Beth Davis as Luciana. -

The set was designed by Dr. David Welker, costumes by Ginger Blake, lighting by Howard Steele and sound by Mary Beth Touchstone. Caroline Fullerton is director of speech, and John Pike is assistant to the director, with ,Tack Whatley as stage manager·. ·

The play runs April 14-17 and April19-24. For reservations, call ext. 265 on wt~ekdays 10 a.m. to 5

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· set to tbe sourlds of old televialoo tbeme SODgSJ, Tcmmy. Doney tunes, and _ether sOOgs not yet quite out of.our memories. Tbe sbow Ia enJo:l8ble for tbe musical accompaniment alone. Nostalgia wiDs~: -

One Of ~ strollgest points of tbe cur:relit producti011 is tbe cos­tuming, w1llicb Ia professional and often am1118ing. The transitions between numbers are also effec­tive, an(f manage to maintain thematiq. unity very successfullY. The ligb,ting, wbich is managed by the Swim team, should also

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. mers are, of course, variable, and mistakes do show up in some of the larger group numbers. The' . smalleNicale productl0118 were uaually well performed and unlqoeJy evocative. 'lbe fiDale w8a ~effective and bllarious, in tbe traditi.oo ci tbose infamoos Estber Williams film orgies.

Tbe Maritlmers production of ''Remember Wben. .• '' opened last nlgbt and runs tonight and to­morrow at 8 p.m.

Hills Denies Senior's Appeal Coordinator of Student

Services David Hills denied the appeal of a senior woman who ha,d her campus residency re:voked last month, and she will b'e forced to move out of her dormitory room Sunday unless a last-minute change· is ~de. .

After denying her appeal, Hills told Knox White, who has advised the woman, that be was not satisfied with the decision, and be offered to talk with Dean of the College Thomas Mullen about it.

Neither Hills nor Mullen had infonned the woman of any action on her case by Wednesday:

"I have no indication that anything has changed," she said. "As it stands now, I'm supposed to move out Sunday."

She said she has made no plans to live off campus. "I live in Greensboro so I could commute, but that would be a real pain," she added.

The second-semester senior's residency was revoked March 15 by the Housing Committee after she ·was charged with a second visitation offense. Another senior . woman who was caught_ with her on the stairwell of a men's dormitory received only a written warning, though she also had a previous offense.

Both women were caught for the second offense March 1. Their first offenses occurred November 16 when men entered the first _woman's room while both women were present.

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Vol.LIX