Page 2 - The News Argus - February, 1977. Editorial Comments Registration — Always A Hassle COMMENTARY Why A Student Exodus? “Why are more and more and entertained whenever students moving off cam- desired. pi;s? Have you stopped to There were other com- take a look around campus ments mentioned such as lately? Campus housing is escaping from the same becommg less of a problem surroundings of campus life, at WSSU. Students find that studying when you feel like it it is of an advantsge to them without all the interruptions as well as their parents if of loud music, and also they move off campus. The moving off campus will help fee for boarding students prepare students for the life was increased by $50 this of the outside world after semester, bringing the total completion of college, in-state tuition fees to $1818 For many it could be a and the total for out-of-state very good idea to move off students to $3271. campus, but this does not After asking a few hold true of all. You must students what their reasons consider the bills, electric, were for moving off campus, heating, water, food, and they responded with three because you are now popular answers. commuting, the cost of First, the cost of tuition is transportation. Now you putting a greater strain on must ask yourself, is it worth parents and students, and it all? On campus all the financial aid to off-campus facilities are to your residents is increasing. The advantage. Sure the food next popular answer was the isn't what it should be, but it food. These past few weeks is there - already prepared, have presented some pro- Most of the dormitories are blems as far as dining hall over-heated, so there s no meals are concerned. The problem of being cold, low quantity and bad quality There’s no telephone bill to has been somewhat the pay, and as far as social life center of discussion. Last, is concerned, there are but not least, the social life always the weekends away on campus is lousy. If from campus, students move off campus, Althea Bailey guests can be invited over Staff Reporter Opportunities For Black Grads SREB Examines Job Market Congratulations fellow students you made it back in “77”. You are the ones who feel it is possible to endure the trials and tribulations of another semester. Some things have changed at W.S.S.U., but unfortunately the registration procedures have not. Please don’t think I’m being over critical of our administration. I know they try hard and many things they carry out quite efficiently. Registering stu dents just doesn’t happen to be one of those things. Since the Registrar’s Office tried a new procedure this time I must commend them, but since they failed to see it through I must upbraid them. I arrived at the gym about 7:45 a.m. on the morning of registration. To my disap pointment I found that the tables and equipment need ed for registration were not yet in the gym although the procedure was to begin at 8:30 a.m. My first criticism of the Registrar’s Office is that they never start anything on time. They know the date and time of registration months before it is to take place, but it always starts late. This time it began about 9:15 a.m. The Registrar’s Office passed out numbers this time. I was one of the fortunate ones (or so I thought) I got #14. It’s hard to believe that #55 succeeded in registering before #14 isn’t it? The reason, nobody bothered to call for the numbers. So if you didn’t weigh 250 pounds and couldn’t plow your way through ho£U"ds of students registration was a long and tiring process. I finished registering about 10:00 after standing and waiting for hours. For many students registration consimies the better psui; of the morning and half of the afternoon. I fail to understand how huge universities can regi ster thousands and thou- semds of people in consider ably less time than we can register our comparatively small amount of students. Our registration procedure would go more smoothly if the Registrar’s Office would start on time and try to follow the numbers they pass out. Registration would also improve if the workers Appalled at the conduct or should I say the misconduct of a few of our fellow friends at the Dick Gregory lecture, I felt a dire need to interrogate you the students of WSSU and ask, “What are we coming to?” The disrespect shown to Mr. Gregory was an embarrassment to the university, therefore it was an embarrassment to you because you are the university. Such behavior should not be tolerated no matter who it is. Mr. Gregory presented viable information that all of us needed to hear and to understand. The time for fun and games is rapidly passing by. We, the future genera tion, are faced with serious problems that must be taken care of before they take care of us. We must open our eyes, ears, and minds to the things that are happening on our campus, and in our com- and the students would try to be a little more courteous to one another. Some of the workers act as if they’ll die if a student has to ask them a question. They seem to forget that if it wasn’t for students they wouldn’t have a job at all. Don’t think that I’m impljring that all the students at W.S.S.U. are angels because some of them are just as disrespectful as the workers. I just feel that a little more respect on both sides could work wonders for everyone concerned. -Cheryl Brandon Feature Editor munities. Don’t misunder stand me, because I don’t mean the weekend parties and the insignificant gossip circulating the campus, because we gain nothing from these. We have the right to question anything that we do not understand, and the power to make positive changes wherever they are needed. Now is the time for all of you sisters and brothers to find yourselves and to start exercising your powers. Much effort is put forward to arrange progreuns and speakers on campus. Guests are invited for the benefit of the students and at the expense of the students. If there is a particular speaker or program that does not appeal to you, then excuse yourself or remain silent, after all, there are times when silence is golden. Janet Brower Assignment Editor ATLANTA - Black college students presently choosing fields such as social sciences, home economics, and education may face better employment pro spects if some will shift to other majors. A new report on manpowe and education forecasts more favorable job opportu nities for black graduates in those fields where job openings exceed the overall supply of college gradutes and in areas where blacks are especially underrepre sented. Some fields meeting both of those conditions include the health specialities, engineering, accounting, computer sciences, public administration and urban and regional planning, according to Black College Graduates and the Job Market in the South, 1980, published by the Southern Regional Education Board. In health specialties, for example, the bachelor’s degree-level fields show scant black representation, while demand in the South is estimated to outstrip the supply of all graduates through 1980. Allied health fields such as nursing, therapy, hospital and health care administration, as well as the health professions (medicine, dentistry, opto metry, veterinary medicine and podiatry), offer excellent employment opportunities. Black em'ollment in busi ness and management has risen sharply. This shift of black students is a healthy trend because of continuing black underrepresentation in the business sector, accord ing to the report. Black women, traditionally inclined toward the more career-oriented studies, have greater representation than white women in what were traditionally male- dominated fields. Employ ment outlook is favorable if black women continue to See BLACK GRADS, p- 4 CO-EDITORS Beverly Blackwell, Cheryl Brandon, Janet Brower BUSINESS MANAGER Wanda Brovra REPORTERS Althea Bailey, Phyllis Battle, Brenda Poole, Norris Sutton, William Penn, Michael Smith, Julius Wilson TYPISTS Marsha Graddy, Gwendolyn Moore, Jannie Williams , Gwendolyn Kendricks PHOTOGRAPHER Ja^et Brower CjrcULA'TION Cathey Mason, Vicie Walker ADVISOR Charisse Fountain The NEWS ARGUS is a student publication of Winston-Salem State University. The contents are the sole responsibility of its students. What Are We Coming To?