News: MSA hosts memorial service after Christchurch Page 4
Opinion: Iowa caucus shouldn’t Sports: Wake Forest football hosts Life: Queer Eye releases its third NFL pro day go first season Page 11 Page 9 Page 17
Old Gold&Black
WAKE FOREST’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1916 VOL. 105, NO. 9
T H U R S DAY, M A RC H 21 , 2 019 “Cover s the campus like the magnolias”
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BSA receives lounge in Kitchin residence hall After meetings with President Hatch, BSA was able to obtain this new space on campus BY REN SCHMITT Print Managing Editor schmwm16@wfu.edu
Georgetown. Nearly 50 people — including over 30 parents — were implicated in the case. At the center of the scandal is William Singer, the owner of the Edge College & Career Network, also known as “The Key,” a for-profit college counseling business. In addition, Singer had established The Key Worldwide Foundation (KWF), a non-profit corporation that was purported to be a charity. The released affidavit states that it is believed that the parents and Singer, through his company and supposed charity, conspired to bribe standardized test administrators to facilitate cheating on exams, to bribe coaches to designate certain applicants as recruited athletes to facilitate the applicant’s admission and to conceal the nature of the bribe payments under the guise of a charitable organization.
In an email shared with the Wake Forest community on Monday, March 18, President Nathan Hatch announced the designation of a lounge in Kitchin for use by the Black Student Alliance (BSA). BSA, which formerly had a smaller lounge in Benson, works both independently and with student organizations across campus to create a sense of inclusion and camaraderie among African-American students at Wake Forest, which they accomplish through meetings and social events. “As Wake Forest continues to expand and further develop the campus, they need to keep in mind minority students that are not offered their own spaces,” said junior Kai Jordan, president of the BSA. “Building safe spaces that appeal to minority students is vital for their wellbeing on this campus.” Hatch’s decision to designate this lounge for use by BSA came after meetings with minority students and members of BSA who expressed a desire to create more spaces for minority students on campus. Prior to these meetings, a list of demands disseminated in late February by the Anti-Racism Coalition requested “a space explicitly for black students.” “With taking the Barn offline as a social space, it just seemed like a logical request,” Hatch said. “It was the right thing to do.” On Jan. 20, 2018, Winston-Salem State University student Najee Ali Baker was shot and killed during a social event hosted at the Barn. Following this tragedy, event-hosting protocol across campus fell under scrutiny, and policies regarding hosting and planning events underwent a lengthy review. After this review, the decision was made during the fall semester of 2018 to suspend future events hosted by student organizations in the Barn due to concerns about the building’s size and its isolation from the rest of campus. This decision primarily affected minority organizations, which frequently used the Barn as a venue for hosting social events. “Before the meeting with President Hatch, we expressed our concerns and need for a space with other administrators at the university,” Jordan said.
See Ferguson, Page 4
See BSA, Page 5
Photo courtesy of Wake Forest Athletics
Head Volleyball Coach Bill Ferguson is currently on administrative leave after being implicated in a national college admissions scandal for allegedly accepting $100,000 in bribes. The FBI investigation also charged actresses Lori Loughlin and Felicity Huffman.
Volleyball coach indicted in scandal Next Monday the head volleyball coach, Bill Ferguson, is scheduled to appear in federal court in Boston BY LILLIAN JOHNSON Editor-in-Chief johnlg16@wfu.edu
Following the news of a nationwide college admissions scandal being investigated by the U.S. Department of Justice, Head Volleyball Coach Bill Ferguson was suspended on March 12. Ferguson has been indicted on charges of conspiracy to commit racketeering. He is due to appear in federal court next Monday, March 25, in Boston, Mass. According to the original statement by Wake Forest Athletic Communications on March 12, the university is “aware of the allegations” and “has
retained outside legal counsel to look into this matter.” The statement also notes that Ferguson has been placed on administrative leave and that Randi Smart has been named interim coach, effective immediately. In addition, the website for Ferguson’s volleyball camp held at Wake Forest, formerly billfergusonvolleyballcamps. com, now redirects to a new URL, randismartvolleyballcamps.com, with Smart’s name listed across the website instead of Ferguson’s. The college admissions scandal, which has been internally referred to as “Operation Varsity Blues,” alleges that wealthy parents, such as actresses Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin, bribed athletic coaches and standardized test insiders to help their children gain admission into elite universities, such as Yale, Stanford, University of Southern California (USC) and