1/20/22 Full Edition

Page 1

News: Snow forces TEDxWake to move online Page 4

Shea Kidd-Brown Page 5

Opinion: If Biden fails to make his mark, will anyone?

Sports: MBB secures vital win over Virginia Page 11

Life: Miyazaki creates the pinnacle of anime Page 15

Old Gold&Black

WAKE FOREST’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1916 VOL. 108, NO. 16

T H U R S DAY, JA N UA RY 2 0 , 2 0 2 2 “Cover s the campus like the magnolias”

wfuogb.com

Humanities Professor hosts climate change talk

BY EMILY TORO News Editor toroer20@wfu.edu

Katie Fox/Old Gold & Black

Alumni of the Wake Forest University School of Business accredit their career successes at top accounting firms to their professors and the holistic business curriculum.

A new study shows Wake Forest School of Business graduates BY BREANNA LAWS Staff Writer lawsbn21@wfu.edu According to a report from higher education research group OnlineU, Wake Forest School of Business graduates are more likely to earn jobs at a “Big Four” firm than at any other business school. The report, which collected data from over 100 universities and 300,000 alumni, showed that more than 26% of Wake Forest accounting graduates are now employed by either Deloitte, Ernst & Young, KPMG or PwC, the top four accounting firms in the United States.

This is not the first milestone of success that the Wake Forest School of Business has reached over the past several years, particularly in the accounting department. The School of Business has retained the highest Certified Public Accountant Exam pass rate more often than any other school in the last 20 years. Additionally, the accounting program had a 100% employment rate for 2019 graduates within three months of graduation and has been consistently recognized for its ability to send graduates to high-level accounting firms. These accolades follow other significant rankings of the School of Business, one of which being The Economist’s second-place rating of the School of Business as a top choice for career opportunities.

“I’m not surprised to see the success Wake is having placing students at the top firms,” said James Barker, a 1993 accounting program graduate. “Wake is a national recruiting school for all the firms and Wake grads tend to be top performers among their start classes.” Another 1993 accounting program graduate, Jessica Good, also holds the Wake Forest Business School in high regard. “I'm proud to be a Wake Forest University accounting graduate, and the program has been great for decades,” Good said. Some alumni reflected on their careers since graduating from the School of Business and commented on how the professors and curriculum have set them up for success.

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“We are now faced with the fact, my friends, that tomorrow is today. We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now. ” Wake Forest Humanities Professor Dr. Corey D.B. Walker commenced a climate change webinar on Jan. 17 by reciting this 1967 quote by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. It seems King’s famous words persist all these years later in today’s conversation surrounding environmental justice. Walker hosted the webinar entitled, "The Fierce Urgency of Now: Climate Change, Environmental Justice, and the Fate of Democracy," which explored the work of the Virginia Interfaith Power and Light. The VIPL is an organization whose mission is to “collaborate among people of faith and conscience to grow healthy communities by advancing climate and environmental justice,” according to their website. The webinar highlighted co-directors Kendyl Crawford and Dr. Faith Harris’ connections to the organization’s mission — and more broadly — their efforts to embody a similar vision to MLK’s call for urgency and hope for a united community. “Perhaps this is our call to realize Martin Luther King’s dream of a beloved community on a planetary scale,” Walker said. Crawford and Harris work with faith leaders and communities who continuously suffer environmental injustices, and as a result, a poor and destructive quality of life. “We work with communities all over Virginia,” Harris said. “We recently started working with faith leaders and communities [in the southwest] who are fighting a critically important battle for their quality of life. They are inundated daily with noxious gasses from a landfill that actually keeps them from being able to sleep at night, and the fumes are so strong and overpowering that their children are vomiting.” Harris continued: “We bring in the faith lens and encourage them to draw upon the power they already have and make that connection.”

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