11/12/20 Full Edition

Page 1

News: Eudaimonia Institute “sunsets” at Wake Forest Page 4

Opinion: Black women propel Biden to victory Page 10

Sports: Men’s soccer on a roll as playoffs near Page 12

Life: Alex Trebeck leaves behind legacy Page 18

Old Gold&Black

WAKE FOREST’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1916 VOL. 107, NO. 12

T H U R S DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 2 0 “Cover s the campus like the magnolias”

wfuogb.com

Core curriculum change stalls The university is planning new course requirements that focus on diversity and inclusion efforts BY CATE PITTERLE Asst. News Editor pittcj20@wfu.edu In the wake of Black Lives Matter protests this summer, the university’s academic curriculum was primed for an overhaul reflecting the need for greater awareness of social injustices and systemic racism. However, as the proposal stalls in committee procedures, some faculty worry the university is rushing on a new curriculum that lacks the ability to properly address social and political inequities. The proposal, called the 21st Century Citizenship Requirements is slated to replace the existing cultural diversity and quantitative reasoning requirements. The new requirement is part of a university-wide push to include more diversity and inclusion training for students and faculty. Melissa Cooney/Old Gold & Black

Students flocked to Hearn Plaza to Roll the Quad after news broke on Saturday morning that Joe Biden was projected to win the presidential race, as he picked up key votes in the state of Pennsylvania.

Students react to Biden win in 2020 election Students celebrated high turnout and President Donald Trump’s defeat after a long election week BY AINE PIERRE Asst. News Editor pierav20@wfu.edu On Saturday morning, the Associated Press, as well as NBC, CNN, and Fox News all announced that Joe Biden had been elected as the 46th president of the United States after carrying Pennsylvania and its 20 electoral votes. This also meant that Sen. Kamala Harris had been elected the nation’s 49th vice president, the first woman and the second person of color ever to serve in the nation’s second-highest office.

Though President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign has not conceded defeat and is pursuing legal challenges in a number of states, the announcement gave a sense of finality to what had been a long week. Almost immediately after the race was called for the former vice president, students took to Hearn Plaza to Roll the Quad. By nightfall, every tree on the plaza was covered in toilet paper. “[Rolling the quad] was really fun. I loved seeing everyone out there, and I was there later than most, but it was fun to see we were all celebrating in our own way,” said freshman Mary Grace Gower. Most of the students interviewed expressed happiness for Biden’s win. Similarly, as approximately 89.1% of students indicated that they supported the Democrat in an Old Gold & Black poll.

See Curriculum, Page 4

It must be something in the water: E. coli Recurring rains have carried human waste from the Reynolda campus to nearby water streams BY RILEY HERRIMAN Contributing Writer herrr18@wfu.edu

The Old Gold & Black has also reached out to both College Democrats and College Republicans for comments, but, as of publication, neither has provided a comment. “I’m really proud of how Biden and his voters kept their calm and trusted the democratic process,” said freshman Nina Nichols. Some, like junior Zoe Clay, were surprised by the inter-party appeal of the new president-elect. “Normally, Republicans will vote Republican regardless of who is on the ballot, just because the party affiliation is, to some degree, separate from the candidate,” Clay said. “This year, I was so surprised by so many Republicans openly promoting Biden because party affiliation could no longer exist without simultaneously supporting [Trump].”

As senior Anna Shutley tip-toed from rock to rock along the stream adjacent to the Reynolda Trail near campus, she lifted rocks in search of reptiles and amphibians for her herpetology class. She found tadpoles, turtles, crawfish and slimy salamanders. Shutley was surprised to hear that another organism, this one unseen, was in the water at her feet: E. coli. When it rains, oil from leaking cars in Lot Q, fertilizer put on the grass around North Campus Apartments, soda cans littered near Scales and neglected dog waste all flow into the stream along Allen Easley St. “I had seen trash in the stream and knew it wasn’t the cleanest, but E. coli means poop!” Shutley said in disgust. “And kids play in there!”

See Election, Page 6

See E. coli, Page 7


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