mh z VOL. 9, NO. 2 North Carolina Wesleyan CoU^e, Rocky Mount, N.C. MONDAY, OCTOBER 4,1993 Wesleyan joins NCSU for lectures N.C. State University in Ra leigh offers one of the most com prehensive and impressive Lead ership Development Series in the country, and through an agree ment between NCSU and N.C. Wesleyan College, Wesleyan stu dents can participate;^in this se ries. Students who participate in the series will receive a certified tran script from NCSU documenting their participation. Wesleyan will also certify a student’s participa tion in the series on the Co-Cur ricular Transcript. This year there are 46 mod ules being offered on various top ics ranging from negotiation to goal setting to effective man agement Most modules are of fered during both the fall and spring semesters. Modules begin at 6:30 p.m. and end at 9:30 p.m. and are held on the fourth floor of the Student Center at NCSU, All modules cost $5. The PLUS 25 Refund is available for students who attend more than five sessions. Any module cost over $25 is refunded upon request at the end of each semester. For more information about the NCSU series or about lead ership development programs and opportunities here at Wesleyan, contact Michael Sanseviro at 985- 5256 in the Hardee’s Student Union. Damage fines cause tension within dorms GET ON BOARD — Pi EpsiltHi sorority was among the campus organizations participating in the Student Government Association’s annual “Get on Board Day” Sept. 12. Organizations trying to recruit new members included the Greeks, CAB, Col lege Republicans, Decree, and the Dissenter. Student apathy bothers administration, SGA By PATRICK BRANNAN liirv Student government and the administration are both bothered that Wesleyan students are not taking advantage of opportunities to get involved. Dr. Nancy Van Kuren, dean of Student Life, says, ‘There are so many possibilities and so many opportunities here.’’ Yet students are not t^kmg advantage of what is open to them. The SGA constitution provides 21 direct senate seats ranging from the five executive board of ficers to three senators at large. This provides almost everyone an opportunity to run for an office that sits in the senate. TTie consti tution states that every student is a member of SGA if they aie “en rolled for credit and attending on- campus courses.” Yet attendance by students at SGA meetings is poor. The fact that SGA members volunteer their time and receive nothing in re- (Continued on Back Page) By JIMMILYN ROSSON Conflict over whether Wes leyan College has the right to charge community damage against students of a residence hall has created tension on cam pus between students and resi dence hall directors. Freshmen residents in South Hall got a taste of community damage when a window was bro ken during the first two weeks of this semestCT. Since no one ad mitted to breaking the window, all residents of the dorm were re quired to pay the fine. “I just don’t think it’s fair to make us pay for someone elses’ actions,” said freshman Wendy Wojcik. Her feelings were shared by many other students. “It puts us in a bind,” said sophomore Glynis Cureton. “Ei ther we have to turn in our friends or we have to become detectives to figure out who did it, so we won’t be fine.” Some students thought that community damage was a ploy to get mrae money. “You don’t think (community damage) ever amounts to any thing. Trust not where the money goes. I’ve seen too many things at this college that never get fixed,” said senior Stewart Crank. The administration does not see community damage as a mat ter of turning in friends or of ob taining money. Michael San seviro, resident director of South Hall, thinks that charging ev eryone is the only way, until an individual can be charged. “I don’t like charging people that have nothing to do with it But it is really the only fair way. I have to assess everybody equally until I know otherwise,? he said. Junior Torsie Judkins agreeds. “Community damage is good for the school as long as we don’t know who did something,” she said. “I really don’t like commu nity damage, but I know it’s something the administration has to do.” Director of Housing Cheryl McKenzie equated community damage with learning responsi bility. “All doors to the dorms are locked. If anyone is in the build ing, it is because they are resi dents or have been let in by a (Continued on Back Page) Author Kaye Gibbons returns to Wesleyan By CECILIA CASEY Author Kaye Gibbons returned to North Carolina Wesleyan Col lege recently to give her second reading in the Visiting Writers Series, the first of tiie fall semes ter and the third of the Eleanor Hoyt Smith Memorial Reading Series. The first Smith Memorial Reading featured Rol^d l^t in 1988. The second reading fea tured Reynolds Price in 1990. Dr. Leverett T. Smith introduced the series by explaining that the Smith Memorial readings were in memory of his mother, who worked in what is now the Eliz abeth Braswell Pearsall Library. “She loved the excitement of a reading. I think it is fitting that , ^ a, l^dy ^ shpuld be rea^ng in memory of a lady,” Smith said. • { r - • . I ( . », I I ♦ )*' » • 4 ( to*. Gibbons read from her latest book. Charms for the Easy Life. She started by saying that her sto ries were about little people speaking big things. Then she went on to say, “I’m very, very h^py to be home. “The story I’m reading tonight is about three generations,” she said, “with the oldest generation based on my maternal grand- mb&er.’^ The story was about a wom an’s narration of the life of her mother and grandmother who practiced homeopathic medicine. At the start of the reading. Gib bons described events and the complex emotions surrounding and responding to the death of her father. Next, Gibbons skipped ahead in the book to when the narra tor’s nwther was 35 “and missed her first date” because of a her mit who had developed a large boil on his neck and sent for the grandmother to remove it. After the hermit and the grand mother talk^ about some meth ods used to remove boils, such as getting a blind dog to lick it or using the urine of a faithful wife, the grandmoflier cut open the boil, €ontinued on Back P^e)