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BY EMILY TORO Staff Writer toroer20@wfu.edu

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Angelou: Program cements a Wake Forest legacy

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The committee’s concept is that, once an artist is selected, they will work with faculty, staff and students in a selected visual performing arts department and will be involved in and available for the Wake Forest community.

“It’s an intricate puzzle piece but it starts with our community helping make recommendations,” Soriano said.

For example, Angelou pursued her stage career for a period of time in the 1950s as a member of the cast in “Porgy and Bess” and traveled to New York to continue her performance career, according to the Poetry Foundation. In following her legacy, if applicable, the selected artist could be asked to attend a particular production rehearsal in the Performing Arts Department.

The recipient would not participate in a semester-long residency, though. Rather, they will engage with the community through art and music for a short period of time.

The award plans to highlight the university’s motto of Pro Humanitate, specifically by illustrating its connection to Angelou’s legacy of being a warrior for humanity. Angelou embodied the principles of Pro Humanitate through her social justice work and her passion for learning, according to Soriano.

Angelou, inspired by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s message, decided to involve herself in the battle for civil rights and became the northern coordinator of King’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference, according to the Poetry Foundation. She also joined the Harlem Writer’s Guild and eventually wrote six autobiographies detailing difficult subjects such as race, abuse and violence.

Because she faced so much hardship and witnessed so much injustice throughout her life, it took Angelou 15 years to write the final volume of her autobiography, entitled “A Song Flung up to Heaven.”

“I didn’t know how to write it,” Angelou told Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service interviewer Sherryl Connelly. “I didn’t see how the assassination of Malcolm [X], the Watts riot, the breakup of a love affair, then [the assassination of King], how I could get all that loose with something uplifting in it.”

Soriano hopes that the award will bridge the gap between Angelou’s Wake Forest legacy of yesteryears and the Demon Deacons of today.

“The award will be a way for generations of students who never knew her to know how important she was as a member of the Wake Forest community through the lives of artists who embody a little bit of what her life was like,” Soriano said.

Soriano added that when the call to recommend artists comes out in the fall, the committee encourages people to be a part of the process.

“There is transparency about it,” she said. “And we want to help support an artist that our colleagues and students think would be transformational for their work, their growth, and their development as artists.”

Four years in, plant-forward dining is a success

The Pit’s introduction of the Vegan Station has minimized the university’s carbon footprint

BY MARGARET BOLT

Contributing Writer boltma20@wfu.edu

Just over four years since the rollout of a new “plant-forward” eating initiative, Wake Forest has built a strong reputation as a national top10 school for vegan friendliness.

When the university implemented the initiative in March 2017, it was primarily aimed toward the small number of vegans on campus, but Assistant Director of Sustainability Engagement Brian Cohen says that the initiative has fostered plant-forward dining on campus.

“It was created in response to a growing demand,” Cohen said. “And it has helped to further that demand.”

A vegan diet is regarded as the “single biggest way” to reduce one’s environmental impact. Researchers at the University of Oxford have found that cutting meat and dairy out of a diet can reduce someone’s carbon footprint by up to 73%.

Though switching to a vegan diet sounds intimidating, several chefs on Wake Forest’s campus have challenged themselves to come up with creative vegan recipes, which has resulted in non-vegan students coming back time and time again.

Wake Forest freshman Anna Barkley eats at the vegan station in the Pit for almost every meal and has seen the vegan options grow more popular over the past few months.

“There have been new wild and crazy concoctions that everyone wants to try,” Barkley said. “The lines are getting really long lately, and just the presence of the vegan station has added a lot more awareness.”

This popularity is a sign of the initiative’s success.

Cohen added that the goal is not to make anyone become vegan, but instead to prioritize eating plant-based foods.

“A lot of our communication and education efforts are based around this idea of plant-forward dining,” Cohen said. “It’s not an all-or-nothing proposition.”

Cohen also noted that the Vegan Station provides opportunities for Wake Forest’s chefs to engage in a culinary conversation with students.

“The vegan station (and other locations) allows our chefs to feature unique, innovative dishes that help expand the student’s understanding of what ‘plant-forward’ dining is really about,” Cohen said.

Plant-forward dining has resulted in an increase in student demand for plant-based food, along with decreased demand for animal-based food.

The main benefit of the initiative’s success is minimizing the school’s carbon footprint. Even on an individual basis, the numbers speak for themselves. If an individual student ate vegan one day a week for a whole semester, they would stop the creation of 315 pounds of CO2 and would save over 17,000 gallons of water otherwise used for the production of animal-based foods, according to world-renowned author and environmental activist Kathy Freston.

Deacon Dining Health and Wellness Manager Madison Fishler said that anywhere from 50-150 students eat at the Pit Vegan Station during lunch and dinner (the station is not open for breakfast), a figure which does not include the students eating vegan at other on-campus locations.

In fact, many students are seemingly attracted to Wake Forest for its array of vegan options.

Wake Forest sophomore Khushi Arya has been a lifelong vegetarian, and it never occurred to her that she should be worried about the lack of potential plant-based options until she toured colleges.

“We took a road trip to Wake Forest, and my grandmother told me the South has very few meatless options, so I thought I would be cooking in the kitchen every day,” Arya said. “I was so relieved to see how many options Wake Forest had, and I was drawn to it as a result”

Arya has valued how much Wake Forest values sustainable eating.

“The culture at Wake Forest really promotes ‘plant-forward’ dining, with different challenges each month, and the activities the sustainability office put on before COVID-19,” Arya said.

She and her friends have begun a new tradition of eating vegan every day for dinner, though her friends typically eat meat on a daily basis. Even small actions like this can increase awareness of the benefits of a vegan or “plant-forward” diet. It can also help to break the stereotypes associated with a plant-based diet, such as that vegan food does not contain enough protein or that it does not taste as good as animal-based foods.

Though Cohen acknowledges that there is still a lot of progress to be made, he gives the vegan chefs at Wake Forest plenty of credit for their creativity, which has introduced many students to the myriad of “plant-forward” options available, both at the Pit and at other campus dining establishments.

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