?
\
>
Bill Hayes does it ag
r %
MM
J
this season, Mack says he chose WSSU for a number of
feasons.
; "I guess the main reason is that I wanted to stay close
Co home," Mack says. "1 want my family to be able to
?ome and see me play often. When my parents are there,
|j makes me play harder because I know they are watching."
\ Mack also says he chose WSSU because of Coach
Hayes and his fondness for the Ram football program.
; "I like Coach Hayes and the way he explained things to
frie," he says. "Plus, 1 remember when Kermit Blount
and Timmy Newsome played there. That is when I first
got interested in college football. And we talked a lot
gbout the guys from Winston-Salem who have gone to
^SSU before me."
t Mack's parents are also happy with his choice of
schools.
^ "1 have always wanted Clifton to stay close to home
and play," says his mother, smiling broadly. "1 have
watched him play ever since he was at the Boys' Club
When he was 9 years-old. Then 1 used to run down the
sidelines when he had the ball, trying to keep up with
him. 1 know I can't keep up with him now, but I'll be
happy just to sit in the stands and cheer him on."
J Mrs. Mack and her husband Taft have always been
staunch supporters of their son's efforts in sports. And
<
Airwaves From Page B1
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i
(nan," Johnson supervises the student staff and sees to it
that the radio operation is running smoothly enough
without supervison from Thomas,
i "I think the station is going to be a great one day,"
iays Johnson. "Response to us is growing rapidly.
: "From the low celebrity status of it," he says, "we just
? _
A ? * *
Know we're good when you can walk around campus and
. Jomeone sees the station jacket and starts commenting on
fhe music or ask, 'Which one are you?' Plus the phone
Itays hot all the time."
| Johnson, an ROTC student who hopes to use his radio
knowledge in the military, is banking on a wattage increase
to help him and the other students expand their experience
in radio.
? "This is just our starting point," he says. "When the
Wattage goes up, our experience will go up and there will
be no stopping us."
\ One of the other reasons Johnson and the other
Students are so headstrong about learning all they can
from Thomas is that he will leave at the the end of the
$emester.
J Because of the consent decree, handed down by the
fjniverisity of North Carolina Board of Governors to require
more faculty members to have doctorate degrees,
Thomas will leave WSSU in May to begin studying fqr his.
feh.D. 1 / V
j iv- t ^ . ; ? .... 1 | , ,](, MMMi lUUM
g Johnson says Thomas leaving, is all the more reason
the students must function as professionals.
! "To me, that consent decree puts us in a bind," he
says. "We know he's qualified and when we come back
next year, we're going to have an advisor, but I really
ti r *l _ - tii i * i- _L * 1 ? ? -a
QOuDi n mey n Know anyming aooui running a raaio siation.
; "That's the reason we're trying to get it altogether
now," Johnson says.
: But others at the WSSU, such as Dr. Hazel Harvey,
*?
former chairman of the communications arts department
#nd now director of the Division of Liberal Arts and
Sciences, are looking out for WSNC. Harvey was instrumental
in getting a minor in mass communications
Smd the televison studio, Thomas points out.
? 44All of this," he says, turning around in the small
radio station and throwing up his hands, "all of this
stemmed from her work a long time ago and 1 just hope it
can continue to grow."
' Despite his leaving, Thomas is optimistic about the
future of the mass communications curriculum at WSSU.
Plans for a major have already been drawn up and
presented to rhe UNC Board of Governors.
; "Once the plans go through," he says, "we'll be a big
powerhouse in this area and that will mean an increase in
enrollment for this university because communications
on many of today's campuses is the largest major.
\ "Right now everybody wants to know where can they
get one of our jackets," Thomas says, "but everybody
can't have one because we wear them with pride."
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_ 1 A | I k |p||V.|l B
' I
)
ain From Page B2
they are staunch supporters of black institutions.
"WSSU is Clifton's choice," says Mrs. Mack, "but 1
like the idea of black athletes attending black schools and
I know Clifton will be looked at as a student afld ncStjust
a football player there."
Clifton's father shares his wife's feelings. "My major
concern is for him to get a quality education," he says.
"hootball is not the only reason he is going to college."
The Macks have two other sons who played football
but Clifton, the youngest, is the first to go to college. "I
tried to get my other two sons to go on to college but Clifton
is the first to do it," says his mother.
And the Macks promise that Clifton will have plenty of
support at WSSU. "1 have a lot of relatives here in
Winston and all of them will be coming out to see Clifton
play," says Mrs. Mack. "And Taft4has relatives in South
Carolina and even Michigan who say they will be here
every time they get the chance.
"We hadn't thought about WSSU until about the last
month when my cousin Francisco Hardy and some other
people, mentioned the school. Then, when Coach Hayes
came and talked to us, we started thinking that WSSU
was the right place for Clifton."
Mack says he feels relieved to have chosen a school.
"I've been under a lot of pressure recently,' he says. "I
have been getting so many phone calls and letters and
somebody was telling me something different every day."
Now that the pressure is over, he fc^ys, he hopes to be
"the best running back over there".
Whether that happens or not, he'll probably be the on- _
ly runner at WSSU with his own cheering section.
TTY
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e Chronicle, Thursday, March 8, 1984-Page B7
i Today
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