Buck Rogers *Law Drive * * *

Buck Rogers *Law Drive * * *

TODAY .INSIDE TODAY EDITORIALLY *'TREK *STATE GAME * BUCK ROGERS *LAW DRIVE * * * . Best Newspaper In The Carolinas ' ~; ·· . VOLUME LV~ Wake Forest Uufverslty, Wlnsto...Salem, North Carolina, Friday, October 15, 1971 *** Number 8 ! Consumer Bulletin Law School Starts Planned 83 Million Drive By JILL THIS · Staff Writer A $3 million campaign, $500,000 attorney," and support of law Leon L. Rice of Wmston-salem · ~n.e Wake Forest Board for to be raised by Nov. 6, was an­ school publications. and James W. Mason of Ecommic Oloperation, headed nounced Sunday by the School of "Although our growth will be Laurinburg, both practicing by sentor class president James law at the University. healthy and substantial,"· attorneys, are co-chairmen of the Kirkpatrick, will begin President James Ralph Scales Bowman said, "the school will $500,000 drive. pubUshing a consumer report for said that the law school's cam­ remain the smallest of the three Twenty-nine area chairmen university students. The purpose paign wUl not affect the priority major law schools in North have been appointed to assist of this weekly publication will be of a fine arts building for the . Carolina." them. ).a to. make students aware of University, which was recently ;''I established by the board of l bargains available to them in the •. Winston-salem area •. · visitors. As stated in the Bill for the He added that the campaign· is Statutes Under Fire, d-eation of a Board for student restricted to law alumni and their .widows.· ) ' Economic Cooperation, the purpose of the Board is to ''im· Scales, said an intensive, short­ p-ove student eConomic position term drive is being conducted Rights Group Named on· the campus and in the com· among alumni of the law school munity by seeking price to raise $500,000 for a three-story reductiona, student fares, and addition to the law building. He By SUSAN GILLE'n'E terested students to contact him. various other concessions and said the other $2 and one-balf Assistant Editor When complete, the con­ p-ivileges." For this reason the million will be sought between stitutional revision convention Bom:d, composed Of Tom Younz, now and 1976 and will be used to After adopting By-Laws for the will be composed of seven Frank Dew, Tere Dale,·Maryi.ou develop ''key areas of service." 1971-72 session, the Student members of the legislature, three Oloper, Steve Grossman, and The program has been en· Government established a other students, two faculty Jim Kirkpatrick have been dorsed by the school's board of committee for student rights and members, two administrators collecting data on wbere most visitors and the executive responsibility and selected the and one trustee. Freshman students spelld their mo~ey. committee of the Law Alumni nucleus of a constitutional legislator Bunz Daniels heads the The · greatest portion of the Association. revision convention in Wed­ convention. students' dollars go for food. The Dr. Pas.c.o M. Bowman, dean of nesday night's session. Spo0110rs of the bill for the low priced places near campus the school, said · present Extensive revisions to the convention cited as their causes· receive . .most student enrollment already taxes statutes of the student body "inadequacy of the present business.'lbe taverns do not have existing space in the law building constitution were introduced, but constitution in providing the as' much student business as and that he hopes construction on consideration was postponed students appropriate University wiluld be expected. Most students the $500,000 addition will be until next week. A hearing on the representation," ''cloudiness and report going only once or twice a completed by the beginning of the revisions will be held Monday at 8 confusion, due to revisions, , , I next school year. p.m. in the SG office. month to the bars near the Photo By Jones rendering the constitution totally campus. Bowman said the addition will Kitchin legislator Steve devoid of almost any goal," and ·Wake Forest students are give the school enough space to Grossman will chair the student the fact that the Charter of Wake habitual in their preferences and Here Comes The Sun e:s:pand enrollment to 440 by 1975- rights committee, whose function Forest University "does not 76 and to increase its faculty from will be patterned after that of a recognize student Government go· to one or two particular •. Sometimes It fakes several tries to get a thiDg down right. Local through with the right combination at the first of the week-cool and temporary rights committee establishments repeatedly. clear. 10 to 18 over the same period. as the real, proportional weather, after l'WliiiDg through UDBeasonably warm days and tryfDg Bowman said the addition will eldSting laSt year. 1bat com­ StUdents also average only two again with an unpl.e8santly cold and wet weekend, ffD8ily broke academic, and social authority meals a day. meet "the particularly critical mittee, which Grossman within the Wake Forest Com­ Thruway Shopping Center need for additional library space described as "one of the munity. re<ieives most of the students' "and that it also will provide two strongest" in existence last year, A convention report is due to clothing business, although 110me new classrooms, increased space secured legislative passage of a the legislature on November 17. bring all· their clothes from home. for student activities and fur re110lution favoring the student After adjournment, SG A surprising nmnber of students lounge and study purposes, ad· Code of Rights and Respon­ p-esident Bill deWeese indicated ditional faculty offices and a· sibilities, a statement which has that, in his opinion, th legislative Uited the Goodwill Industries as Tuition Increase Frozen? faculty lounge. secured approval of student and session was rather poorly at­ a fawrite shopping place. The $2 and one-half million in _ .~ Bc!ard is workfug to secur.e · m:Dnerous other foundations.· · · faculty .groups throughout the tended, particularly for an early liiiiELENTYREE: · univeralty tieasur~r J.G. and graduate· cOllege of· the endowment will bi! used for nation. session. He attributed 8 of 19 stud4.iid discounts in. many of the Willard speculated that even If Reynold& campus, and no fees The Baptist State Convention of scholarships, a sharp increase in hlajor businesses in the com­ Assistant Editor North Carolina has also con­ The committee also advocated absences to fraternity the wage-price controls continue, collected in the undergraduate pur chase of books for the library, changes in the dormitory room representatives, also noting that munity. Sevel'al establisbments ''there is a possibility of a 5 to 6 school go to the medical school. tributed substantially. have agreed to lower prices one A continuation of President faculty salaries, lectureships, contracts in recognition of last year 60 per cent attendance Nixon's wage-price freeze until per cent increase" in tuition for Commenting on University practical training programs ''in day a week for students with athletics, Scales says in the students • legal rights. was average among fraternity next fall would not automatically next year, although ..'it's a little AID TO STUDENTS which students can develop 110me Grossman will incorporate representatives. identification cards. early to say" whether or not the report that of last year's budget According to James Kilpatrick, prevent a hike in tuition or fees, of the skills of the practicing members of the student body in "I urge the Inter-Fraternity increase will be necessary. This year's budget has allotted for the athletic department of 1.7 ·the figures ultimately show that according to GeneT. Lucas, Vice million dollars, 1.6 million was his group, and urges any in· Council leadership to make in· President for Business and $1,~,000 for financial aid to dividual groups aware of their Wake Forest students are "very STILL IN BLACK students on the Reynolda recovered in income, "which loose with their money" If it is Finance of the Unive~ty. means that the institution sub­ blatant lack of participation; Campus. there is need for not only at­ their parents' money they are The University remains in the sidizes a major NCAA program more Lucas said in an interview tendance but vigorOilS activity," spending, but tend to be yesterday that should wage-price black on its financial records, Lucas noted that athletic to the tune of $116,000." careful if they are spending their and, according to Lucas, it will deWeese said. own money. controls be continued, the action scholarships are charged not to According to him, this absence would not prevent the University probably remain in the black. the student financial aid segment pattern demonstrates "over­ from raising its tuition, "but it Commenting on the reasons for of the budget, but to the Athletic riding social concerns and lack of wouldn •t permit us to either." Wake's financial stability, Department. Aholitioriists 'Lion In Winter' Willard said that "one thing is the higher interest in responsible Financial aid to students has student functions" among Phase two of Nixon's plan, people; ·they work hard, com­ fraternity members. Lucas said, will probably require pared to many schools, especially been boosted by a trust fund Is Held Over that any increase "be cleared by larger ones, who are especially valued at $2110,000 given by To Seek Earlier In the session, the committee." having financial troubles now." Professor O.W. Wilson of Burn· discussion bad centered around sville, according to the 1970-71 the by-law which limits For Two Shows· ''Obviously, the committee will Lucas said that the budget for President's Report to Trustees Referendum legislators to two absences (for not have time to act· on each case the undei'graduate college this and Alumni.

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