2/6/20 Full Edition

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Old Gold&Black

WAKE FOREST’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1916 VO L . 10 6 , N O . 17

T H U R S DAY, F E B RUA RY 6 , 2 0 2 0 “Cover s the campus like the magnolias”

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Sorority reaches settlement in lawsuit The university's chapter of Delta Sigma Theta has settled with the mother of Najee Ali Baker BY LILLIAN JOHNSON Senior News Advisor johnlg16@wfu.edu

Photo courtesy of Hogan Disbrow

The fraternity members of the Delta Omega chapter of Kappa Sigma display the charter given to them from the national organization on Jan. 26, 2020. The chapter is still not recognized by the university.

Kappa Sigma operates without WFU approval

Fraternity members of Kappa Sigma obtain national charter, but lack university recognition BY ELIZABETH MALINE Online Managing Editor mailed17@wfu.edu The Kappa Sigma fraternity, which re-established itself as a colony Sept. 28, 2019, received a charter from its national organization Jan. 26, 2020, according to junior Kappa Sigma Social Chair Hogan Disbrow. However, the organization is not officially recognized by the university. The Delta Omega chapter of Kappa Sigma previously had its national charter revoked and became an unrecognized fraternity by the university in November 2013 “because of conduct unbecoming to a chapter and for violations of Kappa Sigma’s national rules,” according to Disbrow. How-

ever, the organization has decided to re-establish itself again as the Delta Omega chapter. Members of Kappa Sigma and Betsy Adams, the director of Fraternity and Sorority Life, have been in close contact throughout the school year in efforts to establish a path forward for the organization. This process was complicated by the fact that the organization side-stepped many International Fraternity Council (IFC) procedures in an attempt to become recognized by the university. “I met with the student leaders in Kappa Sigma on several occasions this fall to make sure they understood our process and the potential outcomes of moving forward outside of that process,” Adams said. “I also spoke with Kappa Sigma staff headquarters early in their process, and they were aware that they were operating with disregard for the university’s policy.”

A settlement has been reached with one of the defendants in the wrongful-death lawsuit of Najee Ali Baker, the Winston-Salem State University (WSSU) student who was shot and killed on Wake Forest’s campus in January 2018, the Winston-Salem Journal reported. The settlement has been reached between the university’s chapter of Delta Sigma Theta and Baker’s mother, Jemel Dixon, who filed the lawsuit on behalf of her son’s estate back in May 2019. Claims against the other defendants — including the university and Rhino Sports & Entertainment Services LLC, which provided security at the event where Baker was shot — are still pending.

See Baker, Page 5

Wake West expands students’ horizons A new study-away program located within the Bay Area offers internship experience

Though she has worked with colonies before at other institutions, Adams explained that this situation was unique, as Kappa Sigma proceeded outside of the policy outlined by the university. Disbrow said that he and other members of the fraternity have tried to have productive conversations with Adams about gaining university recognition. However, he said that those conversations were unproductive. “These conversations have led nowhere as they [Office of Student Engagement] have called us a gang, told us that we would never be recognized on campus during our time as students and have sent letters home to our parents/guardians saying similar things,” Disbrow said.

The pilot program of Wake West, a study-away opportunity located in the San Francisco Bay Area, was launched in the spring semester of 2020. The program will provide participants with the opportunity to explore career options while taking two entrepreneurship classes and gaining valuable internship experience. The university’s establishment of the program caters to the student body’s growing interest in the Bay Area, with graduating seniors consistently ranking California for the past three years as one of the top five states in which they would like to work.

See Kappa Sigma, Page 4

See Wake West, Page 7

BY CAROLINE WALKER News Editor walkct18@wfu.edu


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