Rethinking Community urges embracing global changes together Page 6
OPINION: Trump’s dangerous first 50 days Page 8
Dear John Collins... Page 11
Beauty and the Beast incites nostalgic feelings Page 19
Old Gold&Black WAKE FOREST’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1916
VOL. 101, NO. 10
T H U R S DAY, M A RC H 2 3 , 2 017 “Cover s the campus like the magnolias”
wfuogb.com
Jon Meacham named as 2017 Commencement speaker Political historian, Pulitzer Prize winner and author will share insight with graduating seniors BY MCKENZIE MADDOX Editor-in-Chief maddml14@wfu.edu
rently being tested to combat a deadly form of pancreatic cancer. Use of this treatment is leading to an increased number of pancreatic cancer patients entering remission. Every year Wake ‘N Shake executive members tour the Cancer Center at Baptist Health to learn more about the work they support. This was an important experience and co-chair of local community outreach, Ben Weekley said that “[Baptist Health’s] message aligns with our message: it’s all about making people’s lives better, whether that’s curing them or making them comfortable.” At the event, participants are randomly divided into eight teams with different color shirts, encouraging students to meet people from different groups and organizations around campus.
The university announced that Jon Meacham, a presidential historian, #1 New York Times bestselling author and Pulitzer Prize winner will give the 2017 commencement address on Monday, May 15. The commencement ceremony will take place on Hearn Plaza at 9 a.m. Meacham has written numerous biographies of presidents and is currently working on a biography of James and Dolly Madison. His past works include biographies of Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson and George H. W. Bush — all of which have won national recognition. His biography of George H.W. Bush became a #1 New York Times bestseller and in 2009 he won the Pulitzer Prize for his bestselling biography of Andrew Jackson. In addition to his work as an author, Meacham is a contributing editor at TIME magazine, a contributing writer to the New York Times Book Review and a former executive editor at Random House. He also served as the editor of Newsweek from 2006 to 2010 and the former editor of the Washington Monthly. He serves as a visiting professor at Vanderbilt University and at The University of the South. “Jon Meacham has the ability to analyze contemporary politics through the eyes of an historian,” said Wake Forest University President Nathan O. Hatch in a Wake Forest News press release. “There is no better time for us to understand and appreciate how the past informs our future. We are honored he will deliver Wake Forest’s commencement address.”
See Marathon, Page 4
See Commencement, Page 5
Keighley Nemickas/ Old Gold & Black
At the end of the 12-hour dance marathon, Wake ‘N Shake broke their record raising $334,337.52 to donate to the Brian Piccolo Cancer Research Fund. This amount is unprecedented for a school of this size.
Wake ‘N Shake exceeds donation record The annualWake ‘N Shake dance marathon raised $334,337.52 to donate to find a cure for cancer BY KELLIE SHANAGHAN Staff Writer shanke15@wfu.edu One thousand four hundred and thirty participants, 31 executive staff members, 11 committees and $334,337.52 raised for one cause, fighting cancer. The 12th annual Wake ‘N Shake, a 12hour dance marathon held every spring to raise money for the Brian Piccolo Cancer Research Fund, occurred Saturday, March 18 in the Sutton Center. Past donations from this event have funded experimental research, specifically in pancreatic cancer using the drug cpi 613, that would never
have occurred otherwise. This year the dance marathon broke previous records for number of participants and amount of money raised. “Raising over $300,000 for cancer research is remarkable and unprecedented for a school our size,” said Mike Ford director of philanthropy and legacy programs with the Pro Humanitate Institute. The money raised by Wake ‘N Shake, primarily through small donations, for the Brian Piccolo Cancer Research Fund goes directly to Wake Forest Baptist Health to aid their research. Boris Pasche, director of the Comprehensive Cancer Center at Baptist Health, kicked off the event by telling participants about successful research that been funded directly by Wake ‘N Shake. Treatments using the drug cpi 613, a mitochondrial metabolism inhibitor, are cur-
Concerns arise over funding of Eudaimonia Institute The Faculty Senate passed a motion to reject funding from the Charles G. Koch Foundation BY MCKENZIE MADDOX, Editor-in-chief maddml14@wfu.edu HEATHER HARTEL, Social Media Chair harthf15@wfu.edu MELISSA LiBUTI, Senior Writer libumd13@wfu.edu
After an investigation into the large donation of funding towards the development of a new institute on campus, the Faculty Senate overwhelmingly passed a motion on March 15 that called on the university’s administration to reject funding from the Charles G. Koch foundation. The Old Gold and Black has been following the story closely through the podcast Unmasked, their new platform designed to uncover the underreported stories on campus reported by senior Melissa Libutti and sophomore Heath-
er Hartel and edited by junior Emily Eisert. that encourage and discourage it,” according In June 2016, the Eudaimonia Institute to James Otteson, a business school professor was established by the Office of the Pro- and the director of the Eudaimonia Institute. vost after Wake Forest received a $4.2 milOut of this large donation, the Charles G. lion donation towards its development. Koch foundation contributed 3.69 million This new institute is designed to connect dollars. Shortly after the creation of the instimultiple disciplines, including philosophy, tute, 189 faculty signed a petition in October religion and economics in a way that aims of 2016, calling on the Faculty Senate to reto “investigate the nature of eudaimonia, or view the Institute and Koch donor agreement. genuine human flourishing, and the political, economic, social and cultural institutions See Eudaimonia, Page 4