Southern Appalachian Digital Collections

Western Carolina University (20) View all
  • Western Carolina College (199)
  • Western Carolina Teachers College (239)
  • Western Carolina University (1774)
  • Allanstand Cottage Industries (0)
  • Appalachian National Park Association (0)
  • Bennett, Kelly, 1890-1974 (0)
  • Berry, Walter (0)
  • Brasstown Carvers (0)
  • Cain, Doreyl Ammons (0)
  • Carver, George Washington, 1864?-1943 (0)
  • Cathey, Joseph, 1803-1874 (0)
  • Champion Fibre Company (0)
  • Champion Paper and Fibre Company (0)
  • Cherokee Indian Fair Association (0)
  • Cherokee Language Program (0)
  • Crittenden, Lorraine (0)
  • Crowe, Amanda (0)
  • Edmonston, Thomas Benton, 1842-1907 (0)
  • Ensley, A. L. (Abraham Lincoln), 1865-1948 (0)
  • Fromer, Irving Rhodes, 1913-1994 (0)
  • George Butz (BFS 1907) (0)
  • Goodrich, Frances Louisa (0)
  • Grant, George Alexander, 1891-1964 (0)
  • Heard, Marian Gladys (0)
  • Kephart, Calvin, 1883-1969 (0)
  • Kephart, Horace, 1862-1931 (0)
  • Kephart, Laura, 1862-1954 (0)
  • Laney, Gideon Thomas, 1889-1976 (0)
  • Masa, George, 1881-1933 (0)
  • McElhinney, William Julian, 1896-1953 (0)
  • Niggli, Josephina, 1910-1983 (0)
  • North Carolina Park Commission (0)
  • Osborne, Kezia Stradley (0)
  • Owens, Samuel Robert, 1918-1995 (0)
  • Penland Weavers and Potters (0)
  • Rhodes, Judy (0)
  • Roberts, Vivienne (0)
  • Roth, Albert, 1890-1974 (0)
  • Schenck, Carl Alwin, 1868-1955 (0)
  • Sherrill's Photography Studio (0)
  • Smith, Edward Clark (0)
  • Southern Highland Handicraft Guild (0)
  • Southern Highlanders, Inc. (0)
  • Stalcup, Jesse Bryson (0)
  • Stearns, I. K. (0)
  • Thompson, James Edward, 1880-1976 (0)
  • United States. Indian Arts and Crafts Board (0)
  • USFS (0)
  • Vance, Zebulon Baird, 1830-1894 (0)
  • Weaver, Zebulon, 1872-1948 (0)
  • Western Carolina University. Mountain Heritage Center (0)
  • Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892 (0)
  • Wilburn, Hiram Coleman, 1880-1967 (0)
  • Williams, Isadora (0)
  • Jackson County (N.C.) (2265)
  • Appalachian Region, Southern (0)
  • Asheville (N.C.) (0)
  • Avery County (N.C.) (0)
  • Blount County (Tenn.) (0)
  • Buncombe County (N.C.) (0)
  • Cherokee County (N.C.) (0)
  • Clay County (N.C.) (0)
  • Graham County (N.C.) (0)
  • Great Smoky Mountains National Park (N.C. and Tenn.) (0)
  • Haywood County (N.C.) (0)
  • Henderson County (N.C.) (0)
  • Knox County (Tenn.) (0)
  • Knoxville (Tenn.) (0)
  • Lake Santeetlah (N.C.) (0)
  • Macon County (N.C.) (0)
  • Madison County (N.C.) (0)
  • McDowell County (N.C.) (0)
  • Mitchell County (N.C.) (0)
  • Polk County (N.C.) (0)
  • Qualla Boundary (0)
  • Rutherford County (N.C.) (0)
  • Swain County (N.C.) (0)
  • Transylvania County (N.C.) (0)
  • Watauga County (N.C.) (0)
  • Waynesville (N.C.) (0)
  • Yancey County (N.C.) (0)
  • Newsletters (510)
  • Publications (documents) (1755)
  • Aerial Views (0)
  • Albums (books) (0)
  • Articles (0)
  • Artifacts (object Genre) (0)
  • Cards (information Artifacts) (0)
  • Clippings (information Artifacts) (0)
  • Crafts (art Genres) (0)
  • Depictions (visual Works) (0)
  • Design Drawings (0)
  • Drawings (visual Works) (0)
  • Envelopes (0)
  • Financial Records (0)
  • Fliers (printed Matter) (0)
  • Glass Plate Negatives (0)
  • Guidebooks (0)
  • Internegatives (0)
  • Interviews (0)
  • Land Surveys (0)
  • Letters (correspondence) (0)
  • Manuscripts (documents) (0)
  • Maps (documents) (0)
  • Memorandums (0)
  • Minutes (administrative Records) (0)
  • Negatives (photographs) (0)
  • Occupation Currency (0)
  • Paintings (visual Works) (0)
  • Pen And Ink Drawings (0)
  • Personal Narratives (0)
  • Photographs (0)
  • Poetry (0)
  • Portraits (0)
  • Postcards (0)
  • Programs (documents) (0)
  • Questionnaires (0)
  • Scrapbooks (0)
  • Sheet Music (0)
  • Slides (photographs) (0)
  • Sound Recordings (0)
  • Specimens (0)
  • Speeches (documents) (0)
  • Text Messages (0)
  • Tintypes (photographs) (0)
  • Transcripts (0)
  • Video Recordings (physical Artifacts) (0)
  • Vitreographs (0)
  • The Reporter, Western Carolina University (510)
  • WCU Students Newspapers Collection (1727)
  • A.L. Ensley Collection (0)
  • Appalachian Industrial School Records (0)
  • Appalachian National Park Association Records (0)
  • Axley-Meroney Collection (0)
  • Bayard Wootten Photograph Collection (0)
  • Bethel Rural Community Organization Collection (0)
  • Blumer Collection (0)
  • C.W. Slagle Collection (0)
  • Canton Area Historical Museum (0)
  • Carlos C. Campbell Collection (0)
  • Cataloochee History Project (0)
  • Cherokee Studies Collection (0)
  • Daisy Dame Photograph Album (0)
  • Daniel Boone VI Collection (0)
  • Doris Ulmann Photograph Collection (0)
  • Elizabeth H. Lasley Collection (0)
  • Elizabeth Woolworth Szold Fleharty Collection (0)
  • Frank Fry Collection (0)
  • George Masa Collection (0)
  • Gideon Laney Collection (0)
  • Hazel Scarborough Collection (0)
  • Hiram C. Wilburn Papers (0)
  • Historic Photographs Collection (0)
  • Horace Kephart Collection (0)
  • Humbard Collection (0)
  • Hunter and Weaver Families Collection (0)
  • I. D. Blumenthal Collection (0)
  • Isadora Williams Collection (0)
  • Jesse Bryson Stalcup Collection (0)
  • Jim Thompson Collection (0)
  • John B. Battle Collection (0)
  • John C. Campbell Folk School Records (0)
  • John Parris Collection (0)
  • Judaculla Rock project (0)
  • Kelly Bennett Collection (0)
  • Love Family Papers (0)
  • Major Wiley Parris Civil War Letters (0)
  • Map Collection (0)
  • McFee-Misemer Civil War Letters (0)
  • Mountain Heritage Center Collection (0)
  • Norburn - Robertson - Thomson Families Collection (0)
  • Pauline Hood Collection (0)
  • Pre-Guild Collection (0)
  • Qualla Arts and Crafts Mutual Collection (0)
  • R.A. Romanes Collection (0)
  • Rosser H. Taylor Collection (0)
  • Samuel Robert Owens Collection (0)
  • Sara Madison Collection (0)
  • Sherrill Studio Photo Collection (0)
  • Smoky Mountains Hiking Club Collection (0)
  • Stories of Mountain Folk - Radio Programs (0)
  • Venoy and Elizabeth Reed Collection (0)
  • WCU Gender and Sexuality Oral History Project (0)
  • WCU Mountain Heritage Center Oral Histories (0)
  • WCU Oral History Collection - Mountain People, Mountain Lives (0)
  • Western North Carolina Tomorrow Black Oral History Project (0)
  • William Williams Stringfield Collection (0)
  • Zebulon Weaver Collection (0)
  • College student newspapers and periodicals (1751)
  • African Americans (0)
  • Appalachian Trail (0)
  • Artisans (0)
  • Cherokee art (0)
  • Cherokee artists -- North Carolina (0)
  • Cherokee language (0)
  • Cherokee pottery (0)
  • Cherokee women (0)
  • Church buildings (0)
  • Civilian Conservation Corps (U.S.) (0)
  • Dams (0)
  • Dance (0)
  • Education (0)
  • Floods (0)
  • Folk music (0)
  • Forced removal, 1813-1903 (0)
  • Forest conservation (0)
  • Forests and forestry (0)
  • Gender nonconformity (0)
  • Great Smoky Mountains National Park (N.C. and Tenn.) (0)
  • Hunting (0)
  • Landscape photography (0)
  • Logging (0)
  • Maps (0)
  • Mines and mineral resources (0)
  • North Carolina -- Maps (0)
  • Paper industry (0)
  • Postcards (0)
  • Pottery (0)
  • Railroad trains (0)
  • Rural electrification -- North Carolina, Western (0)
  • School integration -- Southern States (0)
  • Segregation -- North Carolina, Western (0)
  • Slavery (0)
  • Sports (0)
  • Storytelling (0)
  • Waterfalls -- Great Smoky Mountains (N.C. and Tenn.) (0)
  • Weaving -- Appalachian Region, Southern (0)
  • Wood-carving -- Appalachian Region, Southern (0)
  • World War, 1939-1945 (0)

Western Carolinian Volume 62 (63) Number 24 (26)

  • wcu_publications-17090.jpg
1 / 16
Item
  • wi © S * © ■ fl March 25, 1998 Volume 62, Issue 24 lan western Carolina university's independent student voice WCU Fraternity Pushes Alcohol Usage to Limit Story Makes'20/20'on CBS By Staff Reporter The use of alcohol has become a dangerous part of fraternity and sorority life. It has been present for many occasions, but especially for their new member's pledge period. This has recently happened at a few colleges across the United States. Unfortunately, Western Carolina University has been included in the group of colleges with this problem. This problem was recently brought to the nation's attention by the popular Friday night show 20/20 on CBS. Barbara Walters and Hugh Downs took a look at the problem and Elizabeth Vargas interviewed some of the pledges of a WCU fraternity that was having problems with alcohol. Adam Feimster, Chad Hansen, Tim Kump, and David Morse were the four young men interviewed by Vargas. They gave their story of what it was like to be a pledge for the fraternity Delta Sigma Phi. They were brave enough to come forward with their stories in a system that demands secrecy. In talking to the four, 20/20 found out what really happens in the shadows of fraternity life. The boys were pressured by peers into drinking way over their limit. 20/20 stated pledges drink because they are new students trying to fit in and impress the older fraternity brothers. The pledges drank on many occasions, even if they did not want to, because they felt that they had no other choice. Saying "no" was not an option. The pledges were afraid to find out what would have really happened if they had said "no" to their brothers-to-be. These four pledges were lucky, because they did not end up like eighteen-year-old Scott Krueger or 20-year-old Benjamin Wynn. Scott Krueger was a freshman at MIT. He slipped into an alcoholic-induced coma and three days later died with a blood alcohol level of nearly five times the legal driving limit. Wynn was a student at Louisiana State University,who died with a blood alcohol level even higher than that of Krueger's after celebrating bid night with his fraternity. Wynn was pledging Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Both of the boys' fraternities were suspended. Delta Sigma Phi at Western was suspended by the school and by the national organization for hazing. According to Jonathan Brant, the executive director of the National Interfra- Coach Hennon discusses strategy with pinch runner Tracy Biggs in WCU's 10-7 victory over Clemson. Story on Page 9 -Photo by T.K. Roberts Alcohol abuse at WCU: Is it a problem? ternity Conference, which oversees and educates an association of 66 national fraternities, says that most incidents described by pledges involved alcohol. Brant says that 98 percent of situations involve alcohol. The pledges are forced to drink in excess, but this is not what fraternities should be all about and Brant hopes that they will walk out of that situation. -photo by Seth Sams A handful of fraternities and sororities are now trying to forbid drinking in their chapters by the year 2000. At Western Carolina University, one fraternity, Sigma Nu has developed into a dry organization. By becoming "dry," an organization refrains from drinking alcohol at mixers, socials and other functions. Sigma Nu went dry nationally to achieve the true meaning of brotherhood. To Be or Not to Be: WCU's New Fine and Performing Arts Center by Phoebe Esmon There is a relationship intrinsic to all fine and performing arts. They feed and inspire each other. Nothing is so helpful to creativity as a community of people, all of whom are involved in some sort of artistic pursuit. Thus it seems strange that the various fine and performing art programs here at WCU are scattered haphazardly about the campus. The Art Department is located in Belk Building, which also houses criminal justice, interior design, nutrition, and industrial engineering programs. The Theatre Department is in Stillwell. Also located in Stillwell are the Political Science, Biology, Philosophy, and Geology Departments (to name but a few). The Music Department shares Coulter Build ing with the English Department. (English should also come under the heading of fine and performing arts, since some of the greatest artists of all time were writers.) Most of the time these three disciplines are treated, and projected, as functioning independent of their sister programs. Indeed, it is a rare occurrence that any sort of cross-cur- ricular programs or projects are undertaken. (The most recent was the Cullowhee Arts Festival of '93.) So, it was with great anticipation and approbation that the art community at Cullowhee greeted the news of the new Fine and Performing Arts Complex. The new building was to house the Theatre, Music, and Art Depart- C ENTER, C ONTINUED ON PAGE 6
Object