News: An interview with incoming president Wente Page 5
Opinion: Wake Forest must rectify racist history Page 8
Sports: Previewing Tampa vs. Kan- Life: Chainlink emerges as a sas City in Super Bowl LV promising cryptocurrency Page 11 Page 16
Old Gold&Black
WAKE FOREST’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1916 VOL. 107, NO. 15
T H U R S DAY, F E B RUA RY 4 , 2 0 21 “Cover s the campus like the magnolias”
Susan R. Wente selected as WFU's next president Wente will begin her role in July, when she is set to become Wake Forest's first female president BY AINE PIERRE & CATE PITTERLE News Editors pierav20@wfu.edu & pittcj20@wfu.edu Susan R. Wente was named the 14th president of Wake Forest on Sunday after a months-long international search process. Wente, a cell biologist by trade, is the provost and vice-chancellor at Vanderbilt University. She served as the interim chancellor of Vanderbilt from Aug. 2019 to June 2020 and will take on the role of Wake Forest’s president on July 1, 2021. She will be the first woman to lead Wake Forest. “I think it was both the most expansive decision-making process that Wake Forest has ever seen for selecting a university president or, indeed, any top leader,” Provost Rogan Kersh said. “The breadth of consultation, the inclusion across multiple constituencies and the unprecedentedly strong faculty voice and academic leadership voice in this process is, I think, the way of the future for universities.” Wente comes to Wake Forest with enthusiastic praise from all those with whom she has worked. Vanderbilt’s viceprovost for academic affairs, Vanessa Beasley, said that in her fiveplus years reporting to Wente, she was most impressed by her boss’s solution-oriented approach. “She’s very effective. She is very interested in ‘what is the question? What is the problem? How do we solve it?’” Beasley said.
Photo courtesy of Wake Forest University
“She’s a very good person to say ‘here’s the solution I propose’ and then you walk through that with her.” Beasley also told the Old Gold & Black that one of Wente’s greatest strengths is her desire and ability to listen to viewpoints across the spectrum of any issue. She is also passionate about equity in academia, making sure every student who wants to learn can succeed. “One of the things her record
shows is her commitment to diversity and inclusion among students," Beasley said. "And making sure that, for example, first generation college students and students from underrepresented or historically marginalized groups have room to be themselves, but also that they have a sense of community and adequate support on campus." Wente also brings an “everyone deserves a spot at the table” mentality to the academic sphere. She deeply appreciates the importance of both humanities and social sciences as well as the hard sciences and mathematics. “From my perspective as a humanities professor, she might approach problems from her own perspective as a scientist, but she also realizes there are other ways to look at problems,” Beasley said. “And frankly, [she] also understands that all those perspectives are equally valuable and that you need to have people representing those different paradigms thinking alongside you.” She said one of Wente’s strengths is her dedication to meeting students.
wfuogb.com
Virus spike means more restrictions Tighter restrictions on social activities and movement could take effect as soon as Friday BY CATE PITTERLE News Editor pittcj20@wfu.edu After almost two weeks on campus, Wake Forest has recorded just under 100 COVID-19 cases among students and faculty, worrying administration. The university plans to enact more restrictions after discussing on Wednesday, but deciding against, a move to Red status. That step would have included a “significant reduction in contact between individuals and groups,” per Our Way Forward. Red is the final step before Purple status, in which the university would suspend campus operations and send students home. The university is “very concerned” about social activity on campus, including large gatherings at Campus Gas and within student organizations, including fraternities, according to Vice President for Campus Life Penny Rue.
See COVID, Page 3
Students enjoy new recreation spaces Administration created two new recreation areas, one indoors and one outdoors BY EVAN DAANE Contributing Writer daanep19@wfu.edu With this semester’s introduction of two new COVID-19 safe socialization spaces, there are now new and exciting options for students looking to relax and unwind. Due to the university’s opening in Orange status, administrators strived to create outdoor and indoor spaces in which students could gather while still being at a low risk for catching the virus. The addition of fire pits and chairs to the green space of the Manchester quad, which the university is calling Fireside on Manchester, creates a multipurpose socialization space for students outdoors. “I’m excited to try out the new fire pits on Manchester while staying safe from COVID,” said junior Gretchen Castelloe.
See Wente, Page 7
See Gathering, Page 6