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, A P R I L 1 , 2 0 1 0
VOL. 93, NO. 25
“Covers the campus like the magnolias”
Outside the Bubble... Recharging debate, Obama expands offshore drilling Shaking up years of energy policy and his own environmental backers, President Barack Obama threw open a huge swath of East Coast waters and other protected areas in the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska to drilling on March 30, widening the politically explosive hunt for more homegrown oil and gas. Obama’s move allows drilling from Delaware to central Florida, plus the northern waters of Alaska, and exploration could begin 50 miles off the coast of Virginia by 2012. He also wants Congress to lift a drilling ban in the oil-rich eastern Gulf of Mexico, 125 miles from Florida beaches
Storms rip through Triad A series of strong thunderstorms ripped through central North Carolina the night of March 28, spawning tornadoes that flattened mobile homes in southern Davidson County, damaging homes and businesses in High Point and injuring several people. Davidson County Sheriff David Grice said that David Walser, chairman of the Davidson County Board of Commissioners, declared a state of emergency in Davidson. Grice said that the sheriff ’s office needed that authority to evacuate people from unsafe mobile homes.
Fearful, angry Latinos might shun Census Latinos are the biggest minority in the United States but they could jeopardize a chance to flex their newfound political muscle as millions of them dodge a nationwide census. Many of the millions of illegal Hispanic immigrants fear that filling in the 10-question census forms could increase their risk of deportation. Others are frustrated with President Barack Obama’s slow start on immigration reforms.
Future of beltway in the hands of federal judge Judge Thomas Schroeder heard arguments in U.S. District Court on March 30 about global warming, traffic counts and road plans, but he wouldn’t say how soon he will render a decision on whether the Northern Beltway can be built around Winston-Salem. Legal challenges to the road have blocked construction since 1999, when the N.C. Alliance for Transportation Reform and Friends of Forsyth County filed a lawsuit against state and federal transportation agencies. The two groups claimed that state and federal officials didn’t properly gauge the effect the western leg of the beltway would have on the environment.
Chechen militant claims Moscow subway blasts
CHARACTERISTICS
OF OUR By CeCe Brooks | Editor in chief
Entitled. Impatient. Over-competitive. Arrogant. These are words that are often tossed around when talking about our generation, Generation Y, or the Millennial Generation. In March 2009 the Los Angeles Times ran an article, “The millennial generation test,” that addressed such characteristics of our generation. It labels us Generation Me and the Everyone Gets An Award Generation describing our age group as, “the computer-savvy, coddled and cocky children of the 1980s.” To many of you that may not seem significant at all. One reason you should sit up and listen when these adjectives start floating around is that these criticisms are often made by the people who are
interviewing us for jobs and internships. And with the small number of jobs available, we don’t need a harder time finding a job. Maybe we’ve been told that “we are the future” too many times, but whatever the reason for our behaviors, we need to do some adjusting if we want to have the success that we think we deserve. There was a feature story a few weeks ago about resources and tips for finding jobs and internships, but if you get that job and then lose it because of your arrogant attitude or sense of entitlement then all that effort will have been for nothing. In the LA Times article mentioned earlier they also quoted Jean Twenge, author of Generation Me: Why Toiday’s Young Americans Are More Confident, Assertive, Entitled—and More Miserable Than Ever Before, as saying, “If (millennials) don’t adjust to
SG candidates announce platforms By Bobby O’Connor | News editor
With the elections for Student Goverment approaching April 6, the candidates for the executive positions were announced March 30. Of the roughly 3,400 freshman, sophomores and juniors there are a total of nine candidates running for three of the four positions: President, Speaker of the House and Secretary. The fourth and final position, Treasurer, currently has nobody running for the position.
The candidates for president are Alex Liccketto, Natalie Halpern and David Cox. Liccketto is a junior political science and Economics double major and is the currently speaker of the house in student government. Halpern is a junior who is currently the student government public relations co-chair. Cox is junior legislator in student government and former offensive lineman for the Deacons. The candidates for speaker of the house are Seth Willford, Hamlin Wade and Greg Gorman.
Brieflies
A2
Faculty Profile
A2
Spotlight
B2
The Hot List
B6
Sudoku
B6
Willford is a junior legislator in student government. Wade, a sophomore, is the co-chair of campus life. Gorman is a sophomore legislator and member of the academic committee. The candidates for secretary are Martin Booth, Nilam Patel and William McClure. Booth is a freshman legislator in student government. Patel is a sophomore legislator and co-chair of the appropriations and charter committee.
See SG, Page A3
Zick gives ‘last lecture’ on romanticism By Nilam A. Patel | News editor
Local man gets 32 years in jail for rape
INSIDE:
See XY, Page A4 Bobby O’Connor/Old Gold & Black
A Chechen militant claimed responsibility for the deadly attacks on the Moscow subway in an Internet message posted March 29, hours after two more suicide bombers struck southern Russia in brazen defiance of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.
A 52-year-old man was sentenced onMarch 29 for to up to 32 years in prison after being convicted on charges that he raped a teenage girl. David Dale Ramey was convicted of two counts of second-degree rape and various other charges after a weeklong trial in Forsyth Superior Court.
reality, many are going to end up with a lot of disappointment.” Few of you probably go into interviews with demands about salary and job duties, but there are more subtle actions that you may not even be conscious of that may contribute to this image of our generation. This behavior of Millennials starts even before entering the real world. In a recent study, UC Irvine researcher Ellen Greenberger wrote that they found that a third of college students thought they deserved B just for going to class and around 40 percent thought they deserved a B for doing all the assigned reading. If we want, we could probably blame a lot of these issues on our parents. We shouldn’t really, but how
Bobby O’Connor/Old Gold & Black
Ken Zick, gives his “Last Lecture” March 31 in Pugh Auditorium in the Benson Center to students and faculty.
Life | B5 Student Entrepreneurs Students balance their businesses on top of the usual university course load.
In Other News • Argumentation Conference held at university | A3 • Helping the environment during Earth Hour| A5
Sports | B1 New Kids on the Block Ishmael Smith, L.D. Williams, Chas McFarland and Al-Farouq Aminu all prepare for the NBA draft.
The lighting was dim and the mood was set for ken Zick’s Last Lecture Series lecture March 31. Dr. Zick started the lecture off with a simple exercise of imagination and relaxation. He asked his audience to imagine that they were in northern Canada and soft music of birds, animals and water were plays in the background. Then Zick transitioned his lecture onto students, both when he was a student and the students that he currently works with, and the amount of diverse opportunities given to students. Students do not either realize the opportunities they have or they do not take advantage of the opportunities that they have been given. Students are now at a time in their lives right that allows them to explore a wealth of cultural avenues
and different ways to discover their passions. Students always come to him and complain about how stressed they are. Traditionally, students have felt a close relationship with Zick because he provides non-biased advice. He really relates to students which is why they feel comfortable going to him for any and all help. Students are constantly stressed out because of their academic courses. Academia doesn’t have to strictly stick to academics, Zick recommends that students also discover creative alternatives to explore and pursue their passions. Zick touched a bit on his personal life when he told the audience that he almost died six weeks before he started college.
See Zick, Page A3
Opinion | A6 Jermyn Davis advises new student trustee Davis advises the next student to take over the position how to say no and yet enjoy it.