OLD GOLD&BLACK W A K E
F O R E S T
U N I V E R S I T Y
T H U R S D AY, M A RC H 2 6 , 2 0 0 9
VOL. 92, NO. 25
“Covers the campus like the magnolias”
Outside the Bubble... Vermont to pass same-sex marriage legislation Vermont is in the process of passing a bill to legalize same-sex marriages. The bill was passed by the Senate on March 23 and a hearing was held with the House Judiciary Committee on March 24. The bill is excepted to pass in the House.
FBI to announce arrests in “car cloning” ring The FBI recently released 17 arrest warrants for people accused of “cloning cars,” which consists of making stolen cars look like legal ones. This is one of the largest auto theft cases in the United States. Over the past 20 years, 1,000 vehicles have been stolen and over $25 million was lost to consumers and banks.
Students seize on-campus opportunity By Ashton Astbury | Asst. news editor
…Take one down, pass it around, 99 bottles of beer on the Quad. Hundreds of students congregated on Hearn Plaza from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. on March 20 to celebrate the opportunity to seize the Quad. With Wait Chapel serving as their backdrop, students of all ages enjoyed the experience of watching the men’s basketball team play in the first round of the NCAA tournament (however devastating the result), and then listening to and dancing the night away to live music courtesy of local band To the Nines, whose lead singer is popular musician Ben Folds’ brother. Reveling in the ability to walk with ease between the additional festivities presented by the surrounding fraternity lounges, while feasting on the pizza and water distributed by the event staff, composed of both Greek and independent student leaders.
Seize the Quad was described by one freshman girl as “quite simply, what college should be.” According to junior Jermyn Davis, Student Government president, the initial idea for Seize the Quad was generated through the collaboration of Student Government officials, various administrators, and the input of other students. The idea was made a reality through the work of a planning team composed of both student leaders and Student Life administrators, who met weekly to finalize plans for the execution of the event. The primary concerns addressed by the planning team regarded how to make the event as safe as possible, while also ensuring that all students felt welcome to attend. “I wanted an event that our entire student body could attend and have a
See Seize, Page A3
Joel Ang/Old Gold & Black
The March 20 Seize the Quad celebration brought the university together with basketball, song and dance.
Plane crash kills 3 families on way to vacation
Graphic by
Digital Doppelganger
A plane crashed into a Montana cemetery on March 23 killing three families with young children that were on their way to a ski vacation together. Seven adults and seven children were onboard the plane. There was no flight data recorder or cockpit voice recorder on the plane so it is unclear whether details of the crash will ever be known.
What does your internet face say about you?
Indonesian fisherman killed by Komodo dragons Muhamad Anwar, an Indonesian fisherman, bled to death after being mauled by Komodo dragons while he was trespassing inside eastern Indonesia’s Komodo National Park. Anwar entered the park searching for sugar-apples. While attacks on humans are rare, this is just the latest in a series of lizard attacks which have resulted in injury or death.
Two dead after boat sinks off of New Jersey coast
By Caitlin Brooks | News editor Within five minutes of “friending” someone on Facebook, a user can know their race, gender, age, political beliefs, religious affiliations and relationship status. They know who you hang out with (your friends), what you do in your free time (your photos), and what excites, angers and motivates you (status changes and notes). They know not only your favorite books, movies, TV shows, bands and quotes, but also how wasted you were last weekend, as your “friends” ask you what you remem-
The Lady Mary, a 71-foot-long boating vessel, sank early in the morning on March 24 about 65 miles southeast of Cape May. The boat had been carrying seven passengers, four of whom are still missing. Three passengers were recovered, one of whom was already dead and one died later on.
By Elliot Engstrom | Managing editor
Joel Ang/Old Gold & Black
Students enjoyed playing with puppies on the Mag Quad, courtesy of AARF, a Winston-Salem animal rescue organization.
A variety of changes are coming to meal plans that will be available to students during the 2009-2010 academic year. By far the largest change is that meals will no longer be able to be used in locations such as the Benson Food Court, Subway and Starbucks. Instead, students will use meal dollars, which will be included in each meal plan, to buy food at these locations. Meals will be accepted at the Fresh Food Company, the Magnolia Room and the I.S. Food Court. All students living on campus will continue to be required to purchase a meal plan. For incoming freshman, the minimum plan costs $1,525, for upperclassmen not living on North Campus the minimum cost is $1,045 and for upperclassmen living on North Campus it is $362.50. This amount will be included on the financial statement that students receive in June. The prices are a slight
Life | B5
Brieflies
A2
Police Beat
A2
Spotlight
B2
The Hot List
B6
Sudoku
B6
See Facebook, Page A5
Changes made to meal plan
P UPP Y F EVER
INSIDE:
ber from that frat party last Saturday in wall posts. In locating you on Facebook, potential friends already know your primary network and thus where you work, live or attend school. If you choose to provide contact information, which many students do, they also can have access to your address, phone number or screen name. These bits of information form more or less cohesive images of a Facebook user, particularly to casual acquaintances or classmates.
Semi-Charmed Life Students pack into Wait Chapel to relive the ‘90s with Third Eye Blind at the Spring Fest concert
In Other News
• National symposium promotes creativity | A3 • KidsFest entertains local kids | A4
increase from the 2008-2009 minimum prices. The current minimum is $1,460 for freshmen, $1,000 for upperclassmen not living on North Campus and $325 for upperclassmen living on North Campus. Meal plans will no longer be based on meals per week, but they will instead be block meals. This means that students will be able to use meals at any time during the semester instead of being limited to using a certain number of meals each week. The number of meals available to buy will range from 40 meals per semester to 275 meals per semester. Both locations accepting block meals have improvements in the works. The Fresh Food Company will have both a new menu and expanded grab-and-go options, and the Magnolia Room will be extending its hours. For more information about the changes coming to dining services, students can visit the Dining Services Web site at www.wfu. edu/dining.
Sports | B1 NFL Pro Day Eleven Wake Forest football players worked out for 41 NFL scouts on Monday March 23: Aaron Curry is projected to go in the top 5 in the draft
2009-2010 Dining Plan
• $1,525: min. plan for incoming freshmen 225 Block Meals + 8 Guest Meals + 150 Food Dollars •$1,045: min. plan for upperclassmen living on South Campus 125 Block Meals + 5 Guest Meals + 100 Food Dollars •$362.50: min. plan for upperclassmen living on North Campus 40 Block Meals + 2 Guest Meals + $25 Food Dollars
Source: http://www.campusdish.com/ en-US/CSSE/WakeForest/
Opinion | A6 Protect liberty Engstrom argues that the current economic plan will lead to complete state control of more than just banks