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. 26
T H U R S D AY, A P R I L 8 , 2 0 1 0
“Covers the campus like the magnolias”
SG candidates enter into run-off elections By Bobby O’Connor | News editor
The results from the elections for Student Goverment were announced the morning of April 7 with three of the four positions, President, Speaker of the House and Secretary going to run-off elections. The Treasurer position, which as of March 30, when petitions were due no one was running for office, went to sophmore Vincent Cerniglia. Cerniglia ran against junior Beili Li. He won with 686 votes, or 59.65 percent. The other three positions have gone to a run-off vote because neither of the three candidates running for each received over 50 percent of the vote. The president position has gone to a run-off between Natalie Halpern and David Cox. Halpern trailed Cox in the April 6 results, 658 votes to 734. The speaker of the house position entered a runoff between Seth Williford and Hamlin Wade. Willford leads Wade in the results with 728 votes to Wade’s 538. Willford is a junior legislator in student government. Wade, a sophomore, is the co-chair of the campus life committee.
Prof. addresses Globalization
The secretary position is now in a run-off between Nilam Patel and William McClure. McClure had 684 votes to Patel’s 575. Patel is a sophomore legislator and co-chair of the appropriations and charter committee. McClure is a sophmore legislator in student government this year. Voting for the run-off elections is occuring April 8 once again through on-line voting via WIN. The rising senior legislators elected are Maria Montes, Sarah Rives, Wallace Hales, Aubrey Sitler, Benjellica Leslie-Jones, Mackenzie Dolan, Margery Warren, Kaitlin Russenberger, Elizabeth Armstrong, Alana Wilson, Katherine Black, Emily Rabbitt, Christopher Yahnis, Patrick Ryan, and Satie Munn. The rising junior legislators elected are Russell Lyons, Emily Maciag, Skyller Jordan, Sean Farrell, Eleanor Patrick, Keeley Lawner, Elizabeth May, Luke Schwarts, Caitlin Davis, Houston Stokes, Monica Carusello, Elizabeth Martin, Xiaoyuan Zhu, Andrew Bunker, Andrew Araujo, and Benjamin Morrow. Due to a technical glitch the rising sophmore legislators will have a re-vote on April 8.
Rachel Cameron/Old Gold & Black
Clockwise from the top William McClure, Natalie Halpern, Nilam Patel and David Cox are involved with the run-off elections.
L EGAL D RUNK D RIVIN’
Leaked video shows deaths of Reuters’ Iraqi staffers
By Renee Slawsky | Asst. news editor
Thomas Pogge gave the lecture entitled “Globalization: The Other Side” on April 7th, to a group of faculty and students. Pogge is a slightly-accented German-born Leitner Professor of Philosophy and International Affairs at Yale University. As is evident by the fact that many of his works are featured in the university’s “Global Injustices” class, Pogge is a highly admired scholar on such issues as globalization and Pogge the effects it has on certain populations,public health and poverty, in addition to many others. He has strong affiliations with the Australian Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics as well as the University of Oslo Centre for the Study of Mind in Nature. Pogge starts out his lecture by laying out the basic premise of his ideas. “It is on the one hand where there is one side of globalization where we benefit, and then there is the other side where the poor don’t benefit,” he said. He then went on to continue and expand this idea as a major issue in today’s media.
See Globe, Page A3
Classified U.S. military video showing a 2007 attack by Apache helicopters that killed a dozen people in Baghdad, including two Reuters news staff, was released on April 5 by a group that promotes leaking to fight government and corporate corruption.
3 N.C. tornados in March cause $12 million in damage Damage estimates are in from three of the six tornadoes that ripped through North Carolina late last month. Officials told The High Point Enterprise the tornadoes in Guilford and Davidson counties on March 28 caused almost $12 million in damage. High Point’s city manager says the tornado in his city did $10 million in damage, destroying 40 homes and businesses and damaging about 600 more.
Winston-Salem Dash sells 400 tickets to opener Rachel Cameron/Old Gold & Black
Students were given the opportunity to drive a golf cart with beer goggles on the Magnolia Quad on April 7 as part of the delayed Safe Break program.
Forum highlights regenerative medicine By Caroline Edgeton | Managing editor
Photo Courtesy of Wake Forest University Health Sciences
The Regenerative Medicine Foundation’s Translational Regenerative Medicine Forum was held this past week.
INSIDE:
Outside the Bubble...
In the home of the first scientists in the world to successfully transplant laboratory-grown human organs, Winston-Salem hosted the first annual Regenerative Medicine Foundation’s Translational Regenerative Medicine Forum at the downtown Benton Convention Center. This international conference that began on April 6 and ended April 8 was held for the purpose of seeking advancement in the field of regenerative medicine. By inviting institutes involved with the field from all over the world to come share their scientific discoveries and perspectives, business models and corporate practices associated with the progress of regenerative medicine, the future of truly understanding and applying how the body can heal itself can
Life | B5 Babysitting in College
Brieflies
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Faculty Profile
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Spotlight
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The Hot List
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In Other News
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• Spanish Poetry Symposium held at university | A3
Students face balancing working as a nanny or sitter with a full course load
potentially be a more regulated practice. “The Translational Regenerative Medicine Forum is designed to be the premiere international event for leaders in regenerative medicine translation, representing academic and clinical research, health care policy, venture investment and biotechnology industry interests,” Anthony Atala, director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine (WFIRM), said in a press release. “The body’s natural capacity for healing has been known for generations, and the field of regenerative medicine exists to harness this natural healing process,” he said. “It takes a collaborative approach to address the challenges of delivering regenerative medicine therapies to patients in a timely and cost-
See Med, Page A3
Sports | B1 Dino Gaudio Fired as Deacs Coach Gaudio was relieved of his contract during a press conference April 7 by Athletic Director, Ron Wellman.
About 400 lawn-section and standingroom-only tickets for opening day at the new BB&T Ballpark will be sold online starting at noon April 6, local minor league baseball team WinstonSalem Dash has announced. The first home game will be at 7 p.m. on April 13 against the Potomac Nationals.
Obama signs policy to limit U.S. use of nuclear arms President Barack Obama unveiled a new policy on April 2 that restricted U.S. use of nuclear weapons but also sent a stern message to nuclear-defiant Iran and North Korea. The administration planned a strategy review that renounced U.S. development of new atomic weapons and could herald further stockpile cuts.
Domestic killings decline, Forsyth reports 57 percent drop Domestic-violence killings dropped in Forsyth County last year, according to a report released April 3 by the N.C. Attorney General’s office. In 2009, three domestic-violence killings occurred, as compared to seven in 2008.
Opinion | A4 Lost: Invoking Joy and Frustration Lost, the TV show, challenges the norm of television with and interesting and often confusing plot