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photo by Laurel Nesbitt
Elizabeth Mills carries a fatigued young marcher at
the Housing Now! march in Washington. Story on
page 4.
S.A.P.B. rallies support
Jacob Stohler
Layout Editor
Despite 50° weather and a brisk
wind, over 70 people showed up
in front of Hege-Cox Hall last
Sunday night for a rally to pro
test the proposed building of
Painter Boulevard through
UNSIDE
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VOL. 74 No. 8 GUILFORD COLLEGE, GREENSBORO, N.C. OCT. 16, 1989
Guilford's woods.
On hand for the rally were Tom
Lalley, president of Students
Against Painter Boulevard, and
attorney Douglas Harris, district
3 candidate to City Council, in
addition to the crowd of students
and community members.
The rally began around 7:45
see S.A.P.B. page 5 >-
Senate braces for budget cuts, redirects SAC
Peter Smith
News Editor
Community Senate Treasurer Burt Gordon asked
all student organizations treasurers on Sunday,
October 15 to cut their respective budgets by 12
percent in order to help the Senate handle a $20,000
budget deficit.
The deficit is a direct result of low enrollment
during the fall and poor money management by
Andrew Stuart, the 1987-88 Quaker yearbook edi
tor.
Senate was originally budgeted to receive activi
ties fees from 1160 students but must now make
cuts because only 1054 students have enrolled. The
current activities fee is $l5O per student.
Senate officials estimate that Andrew Stuart spent
$20,000 to $25,000 over his allotted Quaker budget
in the spring of 1988, causing Senate to adjust its
o° ps !
by Charles Almy
Half of the college's brick entranceway was demolished Monday night by a drunk
driver who rammed head-on Into the structure causing $7,000 worth of damage.
p
A bird's-eye £
view of the E
campus 7
spending for last year's yearbook, and subse
quently this year's Senate budget.
"It's tough to tell treasurers that they must cut
back 12 percent in their budget when I originally
planned for a $40,000 cushion," said Gordon.
"I'm afraid students will stop coming to Senate for
new initiatives when we keep telling them no, no,
no for additional funds. Andrew Stuart's over
spending will have a three-year effect on Senate."
Gordon hopes that enrollment will increase this
spring, boosting the Student Activities Fees Ac
count and easing budget constraints on Senate.
Typically, enrollment does increase during the
spring semester as study-abroad students return
and more transfer students enroll at Guilford.
SAC redirected
In an attempt to clarify the Student Affairs
Committee's (SAC) role in student government,
see SENATE page 5 >■
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