20090827

Page 1

OLD GOLD&BLACK W A K E

F O R E S T

U N I V E R S I T Y

VOL. 93, NO. 2

T H U R S D AY, A U G U S T 2 7 , 2 0 0 9

“Covers the campus like the magnolias”

Outside the Bubble... Early Afghan election results reveal tight race Early results for the Afghan presidential election place incumbent President Hamid Karzai slightly ahead of his rival Abdullah Abdullah. So far Abdullah has received 202,889 votes while Karzai has received 212,927. This is only 10 percent of the votes and officials stressed that the margins may change.

Senator Ted Kennedy dies at age 77 Massachusetts Senator Edward Kennedy died late on the night of August 25 following a battle with brain cancer. He was 77 years old. Kennedy is the younger brother of the late President John F. Kennedy and New York Senator Robert Kennedy. He helped pass such legislation as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act.

School preps for swine flu Cherokee youth visit university By Stephanie Papes | Staff writer

Due to the global transmission of the H1N1 influenza virus, commonly known as swine flu, the university is taking precautions this academic year to keep students healthy and prevent a school-wide outbreak. Most reported cases of the H1N1 flu have been relatively mild, but more virulent cases have been reported as well. Thus, it is important for those on campus to take the necessary actions in order to avoid contracting the illness and spreading it to others. Influenza activity remained fairly stable in August in the United States. Still, there were higher

levels than is normal for this time of year. Businesses and college campuses nationwide are giving instructions to prevent an outbreak, since health officials predict more frequent instances of flu during the approaching flu season.The H1N1 flu spreads both by direct contact and through the air. This makes the university campus, a confined space with frequent person-to-person contact, a hazardous place for an outbreak if steps are not taken to prevent it. To protect yourself, avoid contact with anyone who shows flulike symptoms. According to the Center for Disease Control (CDC), these may

University community unites to provide for families in need

Wikipedia will begin to require that revisions to pages about living people and some organizations be approved. There will be a two-month trial in which changes made by new or unknown users will have to be approved by an editor. An online poll showed 80% of 259 users were in favor of the trial.

U.S. budget deficit soars to highest amount on record

Japanese encephalitis kills 200 in India An outbreak of Japanese encephalitis has killed at least 200 children in northern India. Nine hundred affected children have been hospitalized in Uttar Pradesh state with patients coming from the neighboring Bihar state and Nepal. There is no specific cure for this mosquitoborne disease that occurs regularly during India’s monsoon season.

See H1N1, Page A3

Habitat‘Pro Humanitate’

Wikipedia to start controlling who edits pages

This year the U.S. budget deficit will reach almost $1.6 trillion. This is the highest amount on record and the White House believes the deficit will continue to grow and will hit a cumulative $9 trillion by 2009.

include fever, cough, sore throat, runny or stuffy nose, body aches, headache, chills and fatigue. If you are diagnosed with H1N1, be mindful that you are presenting a risk to others. Cover your mouth when you cough and sneeze, as inhaling droplets in the air can infect another person. The flu may also be spread by touching a surface with flu virus on it and subsequently touching the nose, mouth or eyes. Wash your hands frequently, particularly after using any public facility, to minimize this risk. As most students have experienced first-hand, sicknesses tend to

By Adam Edwards | Contributing writer On Sept. 2, Habitat for Humanity’s annual Jimmy Johnson Labor of Love Blitz Build will begin on Old Cherry Street, located in the area between Deacon Boulevard and downtown Winston-Salem. The university, along with the Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, is sponsoring one of the five houses being constructed during the blitz. The house will be constructed in an environmentally conscious way, in accordance with the university’s effort to be both socially and ecologically responsible. The five houses are intended to be part of a larger revitalization project in the area between Deacon Boulevard and downtown Winston-Salem. Habitat for Humanity has partnered with several local businesses, churches and other organizations

in an effort to revive the area. The organization intends to build 15 houses in this area, a third of which will begin construction during the blitz. The blitz will begin with an opening ceremony at the corner of 14th Street and Old Cherry Street: the location of the university’s sponsored house. Building continues from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. each day of the blitz. Many of the university’s administrators, staff, faculty and students will be contributing their time to the sponsored house, including President Nathan O. Hatch, Provost Jill Tiefenthaler, administrators from Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, staff from the Office of Resident Life and Housing and members of the university’s baseball team. Members from the university community will be assisting with construction of the house all four days of the blitz. In an effort to live up to its motto: “Pro Humanitate,” the university community has devoted a great deal of its time to serving humanity. When asked about the various service opportunities available, Assistant Director of the Office of Student Development Brighid Jensen said, “We’re always evaluating new ways to continue to increase and improve our civic engagement efforts on campus,

See Habitat, Page A3

By Ashton Astbury | Asst. sports editor

From July 19-22, 25 high school students from the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI) seized the opportunity to explore careers in the sciences and practice academic and motivational skills indispensable for collegiate success during the university’s College Careers and Technology (C-Cat) program. With the goal of supporting and mentoring promising Cherokee high school students in their college search, the C-Cat program is a fundamental part of a four-year-old Wiethaus nationally recognized tribal initiative known as “Assisting Cherokee Students with Academic Success.” According to professor of religion and American ethnic studies and co-coordinator of C-Cat Ulrike Wiethaus the original idea for a summer seminar at the university for Cherokee youth was born when tribal administrators approached university faculty with the idea for a program for EBIC high school students interested in medical careers in 2007. With the support of former Provost Bill Gordon, the university developed Medcat (medical careers and technology) in 2008, which served as a blueprint for this year’s C-Cat program. “Our goal is to offer both Medcat and C-Cat annually and to develop mentoring programs for the students and training programs for high school teachers on the Qualla Boundary between summers,” Wiethaus said. In addition to sessions concerning Information Technology and College Careers, Health and Your College Career and a seminar on Cherokee Culture, Language and Science, Cherokee youth participated in a Plant Identification Exercise designed to introduce students to ethnobotany and the new university “Cherokee Garden,” and a Scavenger Hunt intended to strengthen team-building skills ad familiarize students with the university campus. Student program leader and president of the Native American Student Association

See Youth, Page A3

Museum of Anthropology exhibit to examine Mayan relics By R. Hunter Bratton | Opinion editor

Beginning Sept. 1, the Museum of Anthropology will present a Latin American-focused artifact exhibit titled “Art of Sky, Art of Earth: Maya Cosmic Imagery” that will be open for public viewing until 2012. The exhibit was initially inspired by a fateful meeting between two anthropologists who share a passion for Latin American history and culture–Joseph LoSchiavo, director of the Quick Center

for the Arts at St. Bonaventure University, and Stephen Whittington, director of the Museum of Anthropology and adjunct associate professor of anthropology. The museum’s new exhibit is a collection of painted vases, pottery, jars and other pieces of art, most of which were undocumented and unexamined artifacts until these two men began working to create a worthy way of displaying the relics. “Rapid advances in understanding hieroglyphs and iconog-

raphy from documents, monuments and vessels during the last decades have occurred because scholars have published a large corpus of photographic and drawn images that can be compared and interpreted,” Whittington said. Knowing that such advancements were being made in the field, Whittington said, he felt an

Life | B5

INSIDE:

Take a Bite Outta This

Brieflies

A2

Police Beat

A2

Spotlight

B2

Life editor explores the transformation of the vampire romance novel into a pop-culture phenomenon

The Hot List

B6

In Other News

Sudoku

B6

• One student shares Moroccan experience | A2 • Lenovo presents Olympic torch replica | A3

injustice was being done to other anthropologists and historians who did not have access to these products of history. And thus, Wittington said, he was inspired to obtain the funding to give these pieces the appropriate conservation in the future, give historians adequate documenta-

tion, give fellow anthropologists and archaeologists the cataloging they deserved and give art and history enthusiasts an exhibition showcasing the works and lives of Mayans. After five years of fundraising and collaboration between universities, professors, curators, philanthropists and art enthusiasts from around the nation, the collection was put on first display at the Quick Center for the Arts at Olean, New York in fall 2008.

Sports | B1 Under Construction Hooks Stadium has come down and the bulldozers have rolled in as construction on the new 18 acre golf facility is well under way

The initial St. Bonaventure collection included many artifacts with painted hieroglyphics and carved symbols on them detailing the many aspects of life and the Mayan beliefs about the universe and the afterlife. Amazingly, such simple artifacts as these provide priceless windows of understanding into the lives of those who lived thousands of years before our modern civilization was born.

See Maya, Page A3

Opinion | A4 Redefining Stainability Sustaining the planet requires that each individual does his or her own part


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.