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Austin
Harris/Old Gold and Black
Senator-elect Elizabeth Dole thanks her supporters
after learning the election results on the night of Nov. 5. Dole, North
Carolina's first woman senator, will replace Republican Senate icon Jesse
Helms and join Democratic Senator John Edwards on Capitol Hill.
2001
crime report found incomplete
By
Lisa Hoppenjans
The recently released 2001 Annual Crime Report failed to include two reports
of forcible sex offenses and two reports of robbery, according to a review
of the statistics by University Police.
Internet
policy revised
By Elizabeth Bland
The
Committee on Information Technology revised the Policy on Responsible
and Ethical Use of Computing Resources Nov. 4 in a move designed to
clarify the university's ability to investigate network files and e-mail.
Student
robbed at gunpoint near Palmer Residence Hall
By Brian Carlo
A resident of Palmer Residence Hall was robbed at gunpoint in a
small faculty parking lot outside Palmer around 11:45 p.m. Nov. 6.
The
Advocates returns
for midterm election special
By
Jamie Dean
WAKE TV temporarily resurrected one of its former regulars to bring
some campus perspective to the national midterm elections Nov. 5. The
special edition of The Advocates aired for several hours and included
student commentaries and coverage concerning the political races around
the country.
Law
school graduate wins Maryland governorship
By Lisa Hoppenjans
Law
professor Wilson Parker remembers Bob Ehrlich, '82, as "a really hardworking
kid." His impression must have been right.
WFDD
sponsors ethics and journalism forum
By Stephanie Bennett
In
today's world, ethical issues flood the airwaves and fill the news
pages. But what about moral principles within the media itself?
Lecturer
argues for India-Pakistan negotiations
By Scott Hurff
The
forces behind and the effects of the Sept.11 terrorist attacks are
continually being brought into the light by the political science
department's lecture series.
Angelou
honored at WSSU, speaks to capacity crowd
By Brian Carlo
Maya
Angelou, renowned poet and Reynolds Professor of American Studies,
spoke to a packed house at Winston-Salem State University's Kenneth
R. Williams Auditorium at the school's Maya Angelou Day Nov. 6.
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