1IIII lllll The Pendulum 'i V. Thursday, April 5, 1984 Volume X, Number 22 Photo by Paul Harris DEADPAN: Susan Burgess refused to crack a smile last Thursday night for any of the comedians and was awarded $25 dollars. Housing lottery begins soon By Loukia Louka Associate Editor The housing sign-up for 1984- 85 will be held on April 29 in Alumni Gym. The only people who are eligible to participate in the lottery are those stu dents who are currently living on campus. By April 13, students must go to the cashier’s office in Ala mance 111 to pay a $75 deposit. After this is completed, the stu dent will receive a receipt. This receipt must be presented at the Office of Student Affairs on April 16 and 17, for the stu dents name to be registered into the lottery. Students are assigned a lot tery number, on the basis of the number of credit hours they have successfully completed. Names will be drawn begin ning with those who are ranked as rising seniors to those who rank as rising sophomores, such that there will be six diffe rent lotteries. “This is the fourth year we’ve done the lottery this way,” said Dean of Student Affairs Ron Klepcyk. “I think it’s the fairest way. This system is based on seniority, so the more seniority a student has, the greater their choices are. Rather then have us place them, they have the option to pick where they live.” When choosing this current system of housing, Klepcyk said the college looked at a number of different systems, but decided the current method gave students more control over their own environ ment. “We feel it gives students as much control over the situa tion as possible. Most students, though not everyone, are able to get what they want,” he said. On April 19, student’s lottery numbers will be posted outside the Office of Student Affairs. And, the day of the lottery, April 29, students must report to the Alumni Gym, with their student ID cards. All resident female students will report to the Alumni Gym in the after noon. Rising senior women will report from 1-2 p.m., rising junior women will report from 2-3 p.m. and rising sophomore women will report from 3-4 p.m. On Sunday evening, all resi dent male students will report to the Alumni Gym. Rising senior men must report from 5- 6 p.m., rising junior men from 6-7 p.m. and rising sophomore men from 7-8 p.m. Floor plans will be posted on the bleachers, so that students will be able to look and de velop some ideas of where they would like to live, as well as develop alternative choices as rooms fill up. When a student’s lottery number is called, he and a roommate may choose from any of the rooms that are available. The lower a stu dent’s lottery number, the sooner it will be called, thus enabling him a wider selection of rooms. If a student chooses a room mate from another class lot tery, that student will be eli minated from that lottery, and all the other students in that lottery will move forward. Wallace-Casey nominated Volunteers test their will power Last Thursday night, three stand-up comedians performed in Whitley auditorium to a standing room only crowd. The come dians first did their own routine, and then there was a contest with members of the audience. Participants were selected by a random drawing during the performance. Susan Burgess was awarded $25 in cash for keeping a straight face for six minutes while each comedian attempted to make her laugh. Dr. Catherine Wallace- Casey, assistant professor of foreign languages at Elon, has been nominated for a Ful- bright Scholarship. The scho larship is for an award for Deutsche Landeskunde, which is a seminar being offered this summer for professors of Ger man language and culture. The seminar will be held in Bonn, West Germany, for four weeks and for one week in Ber lin. It will give first-hand ex perience to political systems and major social actions of West Germany. Lectures and discussions with major people in the university and governmental system. Pro fessors will be given first-hand exposure to government, cul ture, politics and social expo sure. Wallace-Casey applied in January to the Council for In ternational Exchange (CIES), located in Washington, D.C. The council nominated 35 peo ple, including Wallace-Casey, for 25 awards. This figure was narrowed down from several hundred applicants. The 35 applications chosen will be sent to the Fulbright commission in Germany for fin al selection. “I feel pretty confident about getting an award,” says Wal- lace-Casey. “Fulbrights are so prestigious that just being nominated is exciting. Getting nominated is the hardest part because they solicit applica tions from all over the country.” Coming Home: Ritt, Hollywood director visits in may p. 5 Alumni Football Game p. 6