Who Says There Is No Such Thing As A Free Lunch? by Kathleen Barron This attention grabber was used as the heading on a letter sent from the Chancellor to commuter students, who make up 75% of the student population, inviting them to a special picnic luncheon on September 2 7 th at the Gazebo. The box lunch was a nice touch since commuting students by definition must be so mobile. I heard several commuting students comment they were glad they did not have to pack lunch that morning. The purpose of the invitation was to allow commuting students a chance to voice their concerns and to have the administrators available to answer their questions directly or to investigate their concerns. The following are some of the issues raised: A need for bulletin boards on west campus near Taylor Science More frequent publications of the newspaper and announcements on WFSS. Establishment of a physical fitness program for non-traditional students. An extension of hours for the library and media center. Parking designated for commuting students not being accessible to them because of illegal parking by dormitory students. Provision of day care to accomodate special needs of students. Greater diversity in evening course offerings. Authorization for access to parking at the old Sickle Cell Building on Murchison Road. Expans ion of evening courses in Nursing Program. Upgrading of Microsoft Programs in Computer Lab. More frequent meetings between university officials and commuter students. Improvement of communications with students regarding their academic status. Students being dropped from classes without their knowledge. Class attendance policy not needed for commuter students Students not knowing/having academic advisors Designated smoking areas in public facilities Improvement of campus lighting Assignment of academic advisors Pros and cons of required books for academic courses: — Purchasing versus renting text books Applying appropriate discounts when rental books are purchased STUDENTS SPEAK OUT by Kathleen Barron A newspaper is one of the greatest sources of information available to the student population. In order to be the Voice of the campus population, we need responses and suggestions from The Broncos' Voice readers. We would like to do human interest stories on students, faculty, staff, and administration. We also need to know club and organizational news and have dates submitted in a timely fashion, permitting us to meet publishing deadlines. Submit any news on paper, typed, double spaced, and with the name of author or Student Forum article'. We will print an issue of interest and write an article on the response. At the end of the article, we will cite the issue raised for the next publishing. Our first question: What campus issues are of interest.