1/23/20 Full Edition

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News: Freshmen practice Opinion: Federal Reserve nominee is Sports: Astros face consequences in Life: Burrito Boys review the sustainability cheating scandal grossly unqualified campus Moe’s Page 6 Page 12 Page 9 Page 19

Old Gold&Black

WAKE FOREST’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1916 VOL. 106, NO. 15

T H U R S DAY, JA N UA RY 2 3 , 2 0 2 0 “Cover s the campus like the magnolias”

wfuogb.com

Environmental majors are approved Beginning with the class of 2021, students can graduate with sustainability degrees BY CAROLINE WALKER News Editor walkct18@wfu.edu

Photo courtesy of Wake Forest News

Ibram X. Kendi, an author and professor at American University, gave the keynote address on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. The event was sponsored by both Wake Forest and Winston-Salem State University.

Ibram X. Kendi speaks on the idea of “antiracism”

Kendi delivers keynote speech to celebrate the memory and legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. BY BEN CONROY Asst. Sports Editor conrbd19@wfu.edu Wait Chapel was packed with students, faculty, alumni and Winston-Salem residents on Monday night for the keynote address of Ibram X. Kendi to honor and celebrate the legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. Kendi, a history and international relations professor and founding director of the Antiracist Research and Policy Center at American University, gave a powerful address about racism. The event was the result of joint efforts facilitated by both Wake Forest and Winston-Salem State University (WSSU). According to Wake Forest News, the two universities have partnered to sponsor a keynote speaker for

Martin Luther King, Jr. Day for the past 20 years. In the spirit of unity and inclusion, staff and students from both colleges addressed the audience to start the evening, speaking on the necessity to effect positive social change and to work daily to improve the local Winston-Salem community. The WSSU Gospel Choir made an early appearance as well, charming the audience with a number of powerful hymns that highlighted the importance of moving forward. “March on,” they sang. “March on.” As Kendi took the stage, he seemed to move with the calmness and confidence of a man endowed with the mission of conveying a message in which he truly believed. His voice did not quiver, his hands did not shake. Kendi opened by expressing his eagerness to cover the true identity of King, rather than the watered-down version portrayed by textbooks and the media.

Though the university has offered minors in Environmental Studies and Environmental Science for 25 years, the possibility of making an environmental major available to students had never been seriously discussed until 2010. Eleven years later, the first environmental majors will be able to walk across the graduation stage in 2021 as they receive a diploma for successful completion of either a B.A. in Environment and Sustainability Studies or a B.A. in Environmental Science. Students will be able to declare a major in either of the environmental tracks beginning in the fall semester of 2020. More than 50 students have expressed interest in these new majors, according to Lucas Johnston, co-director of the Environmental Program and associate professor of religion and environment.

See Majors, Page 4

Benson gets another all-gender bathroom A gender-inclusive bathroom has been newly installed on the third floor of Benson

He wanted to make it clear that King’s viewpoints focused on the protection and preservation of all human life, and that the man whose life and legacy we celebrate would not, and did not, hesitate to put his life on the line for the sake of social justice. He was, according to Kendi, a radical of the greatest and most influential kind. Kendi then explained one of the most formative events that occurred during his childhood. One event, he said, in particular stood out: when Kendi was in high school, he participated in an oratorical contest honoring the life and legacy of King. The judges and audience were so taken with his remarks that they awarded him first prize, crowning him champion of the entire contest. However, instead of recalling this experience with pride and nostalgia, Kendi described the experience as shameful.

After a 2014 effort on behalf of the President’s Commission on LGBTQ Affairs, Facilities and Campus Services worked to transition single-user restrooms on campus into all-gender bathrooms. Since this initial endeavor, no other bathrooms had been updated as all-gender until now. As a result of a push from the Student Government Physical Planning Committee, Benson University Center has acquired its third all-gender restroom. Although there were already two allgender restrooms in Benson, they are relatively inaccessible due to their location on the fifth floor of the building.

See MLK, Page 6

See Benson, Page 5

BY OLIVIA FIELD Editor-in-Chief fielor17@wfu.edu


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