11/11/21 Full Edition

Page 1

News: Students react to new UCC changes Page 4

Opinion: Republicans place blame for trade prices on Biden Page 7

Sports: UNC deals Wake Forest bit- Life: Anderson shines in new ter defeat film "The French Dispatch" Page 10 Page 14

Old Gold&Black

WAKE FOREST’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1916 VOL. 108, NO. 12

T H U R S DAY, N OV E M B E R 11 , 2 0 21 “Cover s the campus like the magnolias”

wfuogb.com

Cornel West speaks on campus The prominent scholar and activist spoke at two events: a lecture and a symposium about his book BY AINE PIERRE News Editor pierav20@wfu.edu On Nov. 4 and 5, renowned scholar and activist Cornel West came to Wake Forest’s campus to speak to students and community members. On Nov. 4, West delivered a lecture to Wake Forest community members in Wait Chapel. On Nov. 5, West spoke with professors from across the nation about his book, “Prophecy Deliverance!” — which came out in 1982 — in the Broyhill Auditorium. The events were sponsored by the Divinity School’s Mac Bryan Prophetic Teaching Series and the African American Studies Program. “The Mac Bryan Prophetic Preaching Series is among the annual signature events of the School of Divinity,” Dean of the Divinity School Jonathan Lee Walton said in a Wake Forest press release. Lucius You/ Old Gold & Black

Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and former Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel addressed a wide range of political and foreign policy topics in two talks on Nov. 9.

Albright and Hagel speak face-to-face with students The two former cabinet officials spoke in both Wait Chapel and the Lawrence Joel Colliseum BY ANITA DONGIEUX Contributing Writer dongap21@wfu.edu

On Tuesday, Nov. 9, Wake Forest’s Face to Face Speaker Series held a forum in Wait Chapel with former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and former Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel. This students-only event allowed the undergraduate population to ask their burning questions on topics ranging from foreign policy to female empowerment in the workplace. At the forum, Albright said she always knew she had a passion for politics, es-

pecially growing up as the daughter of a Czechoslovakian diplomat who went on to teach foreign policy at the University of Denver. Albright also said she never saw herself as being fit for secretary of state, but former President Bill Clinton, who appointed her, and the Senate, which confirmed her in a 99-0 vote, clearly believed otherwise. Albright recounted her experiences as the first female secretary of state and explained why she urges women to continue to run for office and become a part of civil society. Albright's advice for women wanting to get involved in politics is to be prepared to have to do anything. “If you say you are going to do something, follow through and do it,” Albright said.

See West, Page 5

2020 turnout numbers released More Wake Forest students voted in 2020 than in any election in recent memory, report says BY DRE W SKILTON Contributing Writer skila19@wfu.edu

Albright said she ultimately regretted not running for office herself. Hagel, on the other hand, said his main interest is in public service, but that it was not where his priorities always were. After an unsuccessful college career, Hagel decided to enlist in the Army. After the war, he was working at a radio station when he decided to go out on a limb and move to Washington, D.C. There, he found odd jobs while working to find more permanent and gratifying employment. Hagel answered questions related to U.S. troops returning to Afghanistan after President Joe Biden had made the decision to pull them out. Hagel said that as a country, we must accept risks when trying to solve any political or military issues.

In 2020, Wake Forest University’s voting rate for the undergraduate student population skyrocketed to 78.2% — an increase of 29.9% from the 2016 election — according to a National Study of Learning, Voting, and Engagement (NSLVE) report by the Institute for Democracy & Higher Education. Wake Forest also saw a significant increase in the percentage of students who were registered to vote. According to the report, that rate was 91.5% of the student body, compared to 76.7% in the 2016 presidential election and 79.3% in the 2018 midterm election. Over 1,200 college campuses participated in the study, and according to the report, the 2020 voting rate for all institutions was 66%, compared to 53% in the 2016 election.

See F2F, Page 4

See Turnout, Page 6


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