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. 28
T H U R S D AY, A P R I L 1 5 , 2 0 1 0
“Covers the campus like the magnolias”
Students complete the 2010 census
Outside the Bubble...
By Katie Phillips | Staff writer
China earthquake kills 400, injures thousands more A strong earthquake of 6.9 on the Richter’s scale toppled hundreds of homes and some schools in the remote mountainous Tibetan Plateau of southwest China on April 14, killing at least 400 people and injuring thousands. Hundreds of troops have been dispatched to Qinghai Province’s Yushu county and some aid shipments from private organizations have set off from the provincial capital, Xining.
Just like all other citizens, on-campus registered students will actively participate in the 2010 national census this week. The census, which occurs every ten years, not only gives our growing nation a more accurate demographic profile, but it provides decisive political
and funding decisions made on the national, state and local level. Matt Clifford, director of Residence Life and Housing, is coordinating the efforts for the university’s on-campus census. According to Clifford, the university revealed a specific by-room roster to the U.S. Census Enumerator. This allowed the Enumerators to provide
the right amount of census forms for all on-campus students. This week the university’s Residence Life and Housing staff will deliver the census forms to all students via Hall Directors and Resident Advisors. After completion, Residence Life and Housing will collect the census forms and send them off to the official U.S. Census Enumerator headquarters.
It is strongly recommended by the Residence Life and Housing staff that all on-campus students participate. Furthermore, all people living in the U.S., including non-citizens, are required to fill out the census form as stated in the Constitution: “The actual enumeration shall be made
See Census Page A3
Escort Policy to be strictly enforced at Hanes Mall Under the new policy, shoppers in the mall under 18 are required to be accompanied at all times by a parent or guardian after 6 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. The policy, released in early February, is meant to return the mall to a more family-friendly atmosphere. Many adults said that their attitudes about the mall have changed for the better while teenagers offer a different point of view.
Storms knock down trees, power lines
Bernanke says rates to stay low for “extended period”
Went, Saw, Conquered
Student Group wins KPMG Case Competition By Cheryl Johnson | Staff writer
A moderate U.S. economic recovery is likely to warrant very low interest rates for a long time, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke testified on April 14. Refusing to rule out the risk of a the possibility of “double-dip” recession, Bernanke told law-makers inflation is not an immediate concern, giving the Fed room to maintain its highly stimulative policies.
Rachel Cameron/Old Gold & Black
A line of thunderstorms knocked down trees, toppled power lines and caused other damage on the night of April 8 in Forsyth, Surry, Stokes and Wilkes counties. The National Weather Service in Raleigh issued a tornado watch for Forsyth, Guilford, Davidson, Surry, Stokes and Yadkin counties shortly after 9 p.m., but canceled it at 9:45. The storms knocked out power to as many as 2,012 Duke Energy customers in Forsyth County and 2,438 customers in Guilford County. But power was restored to many by 10 p.m.
Representing the United States in the KPMG Global Case Competition in Athens, Greece, from April 7-9, a team of four undergraduate business students has claimed the title of world champions. Senior Andrea Kensy of Upper Holland, Penn., juniors Swayze Smartt of Dallas, Texas, and Zachary Zimbile of Allenwood, N.J., and sophomore Louis Brotherton of Seattle, Wash., advanced to the finals of the competition on April 8 and competed against teams from France, Sweden and Germany on April 9.
There were also teams from Russia, the United Kingdom, Norway, Canada, Spain, Luxemburg and the Czech Republic in the competition. The team qualified for the international competition by winning the national round of the KPMG Global Case Competition in January. KPMG was formed in 1987 with the merger of Peat Marwick Internation (PMI) and Klynveld Main Goerdeler (KMG) and their individual member firms. In order to be able to participate in the case competition, all group members must be intended or declared business majors and attend a 30-minute time sot during the preliminary campus rounds,
a 30-minute time slot during the final campus round and a 4-hour time slot during the National Competition. The schools that participated in this year’s competition were Lehigh University, Baylor University, University of Illinois, University of Maryland, University of Notre Dame, University of Southern California and Wake Forest. The competition begins on the campus level as the teams compete against other groups from their own school. One winning team from each campus was selected to participate in the national finals,
See KPMG, Page A4
SG run-off election decides final executive positions By Bobby O’Connor | News editor
After the offical results of the April 6 student government elections left three of the four executive positions, President, Speaker of the House and Secretary, going to run-off elections. The results from the run-off election, which were held Thursday, April 8, were announced April 9. The positions went to a run-off election because in each of the contested election races there were three candidates for each position, which makes it difficult to have a candidate win since a simple majority of more than 50 percent is needed to win. Junior Natalie Halpern defeated junior David Cox in the run-off election for president. She won by a slim margin of 4 votes, 895 to 891, with 1786 votes cast. Halpern had initially been trailing Cox in the April 6 results, 658 votes to 734. Alex Liccketto, who had also run for president, was bumped from the
INSIDE: Brieflies
A2
Faculty Profile
A2
Spotlight
B2
The Hot List
B6
Sudoku
B6
election because he received the lowest number of votes during the initial round of voting. Junior Seth Williford defeated sophomore Hamlin Wade in the run-off election for speaker of the house. Williford won the election with 829 votes to Wade’s 645. Following the April 6 election Willford lead Wade in the results with 728 votes to Wade’s 538. Greg Gorman, who had also been running for speaker of the house, was removed from the ballet for the run-off election because he received the lowest number of votes during the April 6 election. Sophomore William McClure beat sophomore Nilam Patel for the secretary position with 746 to Patel’s 708 votes. Patel had trailed McClure in the April 6 election, 684 to 575. The Treasurer position, which was decided during the April 6 election, went to sophmore Vincent Cerniglia in another close decision.
Rachel Cameron/Old Gold & Black
The new student government executive members, from left; VJ Cerniglia, treasurer, Natalie Halpern, president, William McClure, secretary, and Seth Williford, speaker of the house.
Life | B5 Springfest! Spring’s in the Air Ben Harper is set to headline the Springefest concert April 21. Turn to life for a full look into the festivities.
In Other News •Project Launch introduces colleges | A3 • East Asian Spring Festival celebrates weather | A3
Sports | B1 Bzdelick announced as new coach Jeff Bzdelick announcd April 14 as new men’s basketball coach, replacing Dino Gaudio.
Opinion | A4 Understanding economics through pants Brian Amrine uses sweatpants as an analogy for understanding government spending