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OLD GOLD&BLACK W A K E

F O R E S T

U N I V E R S I T Y

VOL. 91, NO. 28

T H U R S D AY, A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 0 8

“Covers the campus like the magnolias”

Clinton and Angelou to speak in Wait Chapel Kappa Sigma to hold run By Kevin Koehler | Contributing editor

Senator Hillary Clinton, seeking the Democratic nomination for president of the United States, will visit campus April 18. She will appear 6 p.m. in Wait Chapel on stage with Reynolds Professor of American Studies Maya Angelou. “Dr. Angelou has been a ... supporter of Senator Clinton’s for a long time and announced her endorsement many months ago,” Clinton spokeswoman Carly Lindauer said. “We are excited to be able to have the opportunity to have the two of them together at this event.” Angelou was named poet laureate by President Bill Clinton and composed and read the poem “On the Pulse of Morning” for his inauguration. The event is being billed as “A Conversation with Hillary Clinton and Maya Angelou.”

The candidate will answer questions from Angelou and the audience. “It will be a little more informal than some other campaign stops ... I think it will be more of a dialogue between them and the people who come,” Lindauer said. The event will be free and open to the public with no tickets required. Seats will be available on a first-come firstserve basisas they were at Clinton’s visit to Forsyth Technical Community College last month. Doors are scheduled to open at 4 p.m. Somewhere around 2,000 seats should be free. There will be speakers set up outside to accommodate any overflow crowd that may gather on the Quad. Students in Angelou’s class this semester have been invited to attend as special guests, sit in the choir loft and go backstage to meet See Hillary, Page A3

By Molly Nevola | Staff writer

“I spoke to the National Executive Director of Theta Chi and he’s going to be coming down for the tournament. We are also hoping to get Dr. Hatch involved,” Donner said. Donner transferred to the university at the start of his sophomore year. “I went around to several different fraternities but liked that Theta Chi was so well-rounded academically, socially and athletically,” Donner said. “I just kept getting more and more involved.” Mitchell Buder, a junior Kappa Sigma, has invested ample time into planning the

Kappa Sigma fraternity, which has organized its annual Piccolo Run relay race since the early ‘80s, will host the event, a 120 mile run from the university’s old campus in Wake Forest, N.C., to the Reynolda campus, under its new name — the Mark Pruitt Run for the MacKay Foundation. The run will begin April 24 in the afternoon at the original campus and will end April 25 around noon in front of Wait Chapel. Various relay teams of at least 36 Kappa Sigma brothers will run the distance in approximately 24 hours. Junior Mitchell Buder, co-chair of this year’s event, will run in relay himself for his second consecutive year. “It’s a great way to connect with our alumni who ran a similar charity event during the ‘80s and to bond with brothers in a philanthropic way,” Buder said. According to Buder, the fraternity sought to involve more of the community this year, calling on various local businesses to help sponsor the run. And so far there has been a good response: several companies, including Putters, La Caretta and Interfraternity Council, have donated hundreds of dollars in exchange for their logo on the back of the event T-shirt. “We’re hoping that this will get the word out about the run, and it will make it more memorable for the brothers who participate,” Buder said. The fraternity decided this year to support the Mark C. Pruitt Scholarship Fund as well as the MacKay Foundation for Cancer Research due to their relevance to the chapter. The scholarship fund is named after Pruitt, a former brother who died in a water skiing accident in the ‘80s before his senior year at the university. There are two scholarships, both established in 1988, that are awarded to brothers in his name based on leadership and academic merit. The MacKay Foundation for Cancer

See Greek, Page A2

See Charity, Page A4

Photo courtesy http://nymag.com

Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will speak in Wait Chapel April 18 as a part of her North Carolina campaign.

Renowned Students defy negative stereotypes poet will visit, read By Haowei Tong | Staff writer

W. S. Merwin, one of the most influential poets of the 20th century, will be reading from his work at 7 p.m. April 22 in Babcock Auditorium at Reynolda House. Merwin is a Pulitzer Prizewinning poet and essayist who has published more than twenty poetry collections. He is also an avid environmentalist and peace activist, initially achieving fame as an anti-war poet in the 1960s. Currently Merwin resides in Hawaii and is dedicated to rainforest restoration. Merwin has served as the playwright-in-residence at the Poet’s Theater in Cambridge, Mass., and the poetry editor at The Nation, and he is a well-respected translator. Merwin’s literary prizes include the Yale Younger Poets Prize, the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award and a Lannan Lifetime Achievement Award. Merwin began composing hymns at a remarkably young age for his father, a Presbyterian minister. “I started writing hymns for my father as soon as I could write at all,” Merwin said. Additionally, Merwin conveyed a deep interest in Native American culture as a child. “I learned to read because of wanting to learn about Indians, because of the way they lived,” he said. Merwin’s early poetry generally featured mythological themes. Robert Graves’ heavy influence is reflected in these works. He moved to London in 1951 and worked as a translator for several years after studying romance languages at Princeton University. Following his graduation from Princeton, Merwin has not since been formally associated with any writing program or university. In America, Merwin’s first book of poems was selected by W. H. Auden for the Yale Younger Poets Prize in 1952. Later the two clashed regarding Merwin’s outspoken political involvement. Merwin wrote an article, “On being awarded the Pulitzer Prize,” See Poet, Page A3

A few university students are standing out by serving their community, and making others question exactly what is “typical” of Greek organizations.

Haowei Tong/Old Gold & Black

Kappa Sigma Mitchell Buder, Kappa Alpha Pete Pryor, and Theta Chi Taylor Donner are just a few university Greeks who defy negative stereotypes about Greek life by serving their community. By Jenn Kimbal | Asst. news editor Negative stereotypes of fraternity members are prevalent not only in the media, but on college campuses across the country. Strong coverage of fraternity hazing and underage drinking perpetuate the idea that fraternities are dangerous institutions that encourage dangerous and illegal activities. Fraternities have been referred to as “exclusive drinking clubs for privileged students”. However, there are several fraternity members on the university’s campus that

are defying these negative stereotypes. Three individuals in particular are using their fraternities as a platform for positive change both on campus and in the community. Taylor Donner, a sophomore in Theta Chi, has worked with his fraternity and the Inter Fraternity Council to plan a campuswide golf tournament to support the Brian Piccolo Cancer Fund. “I’m positive we can make the tournament a success with the help of the IFC and the brothers of our fraternity,” Donner said. The tournament is planned for Oct. 4, but preparations have already begun.

R EMEMBERING V T

tion. The concert is titled Petitions and includes “Postponing Descent,” which Four Wake Forest dancers, seniors Sarah was performed at the 2008 American Klyap and Brook Vogel and sophomores College Dance Festival, and “Every Text Katie Miller and Jennifer Reppucci, will Has an Intertext,” which was featured at be performing pieces the North Carolina choreographed by Dance Festival. Assistant Professor The professional of Dance Christina dancers involved “It’s nice to see different Tsoules Soriano along are Katherine types of dance before with professional Keifer Stark, Jennimaking any decisions dancers from North fer McNure, Amy (about my career). Don’t Carolina at 7:30 p.m. Love Beasley and on April 30 in Scales Ashlee Ramsey. ask me, it causes heart Fine Arts Center. The students have palpatations.” Both Soriano and only met the profesKatie Miller all of the student sionals a few times. dancers are excite Performing with the Sophomore about the collaboraprofessional dancers tion is exciting for all of “We are excited and the girls. fortunate to have this opportunity,” Vogel “It is a different level of commitment,” said. Vogel said. Soriano choreographed this performance last fall for eight of her students and has modified it for this collabora- See Purpose, Page A4 By Samantha Cernuto | Senior writer

Kelly Makepeace/Old Gold & Black

Various activities occurred on campus April 16, the one year anniversary of the shootings at Virginia Tech, to remember those lost.

Life | B7

INSIDE:

Dancers to perform

Jason Mraz hits Wait Chapel

Brieflies

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Police Beat

A2

Spotlight

B2

Hear about the artist’s performance at the university, along with his soon to be released album

The Hot List

B8

In Other News

Sudoku

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• Q & A with writer and activist David Horowitz | A2 • Students use writing for a good cause | A5

Sports | B1 Cheer goes national The university cheerleading squad recently participated in a national competition in Daytona Beach, Fla.

Opinion | A6 Pit not worth it Merski argues that eating off campus is a better deal than doing so at the Pit.


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