2.17.13

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OLD GOLD&BLACK WAKE FOREST UNIVERSIT Y

SPORTS

NEWS

VOL. 96, NO. 20

A look into the Board of Trustees Page 6

oldgoldandblack.com

Tuition increase announced

Fake IDs are a rarity on campus Page 5 Secretary of the Interior visits Wake Page 4

Football reels in new recruit class Page 11 Graphic by Kristi Chan/Old Gold & Black

At its recent board meeting Feb. 7-8, the Board of Trustees approved an increase in tuition, sparking anger and concern among many university students. Many students already have significant debt.

Spotlight on Catherine Roach Page 12

LIFE

Whipping up some recipes in the dorm Page 20

Health tips for the busy student Page 16

OPINION

T H U R S DAY, F E B R UA RY 14 , 2 01 3

Life lessons from a college senior Page 8

Interracial dating still not accepted Page 9

Costs of attendance rise 3.5 percent, putting costs beyond $60,000 BY AUSTIN COOK Asst. News Editor cookar12@wfu.edu At their winter meeting Feb. 8, the Board of Trustees voted to increase university tu-

ition costs for the 2013-14 school year by 3.5 percent, raising the total from $42,700 to $44,200 annually. When including room and board as well as school supplies, the total cost of attendance is now estimated to be $60,242. In a press release earlier this week, Katie Neal, executive director of news and communication, stressed that the administration has kept recent tuition increases under four percent the last two years. “The decision reflects a determined effort to keep tuition

increases low,” the statement said. While the news comes as no surprise with tuition on campuses across the US rising at twice the rate of inflation, it was met with immediate skepticism and frustration from students. “I’m just wondering what the money is going toward,” freshman Angela Gallagher said. Freshman Benedicte Crudgington thought that students should receive greater benefits from the university since tuition

See Tuition, Page 6

Christian Freedom rider speaks Medved to fight for civil rights

University community mourns tragic loss of firstyear student and scholar

Bob Zellner faced prison and beatings to advance Civil Rights Movement

BY SARAH MORAN Asst. News Editor morase12@wfu.edu

BY DANIEL SCHWINDT News Editor schwd11@wfu.edu

The university grieves the loss of freshman Christian Medved, who died in his hometown of Pleasonton, Ca., on Feb. 6. Medved came to the university with the outlook of being at a school that would help him thrive. He viewed the university as a positive undergraduate-focused environment with crucial collaboration between students and professors, small class sizes for intriguing discus-

Born into an Alabama family where both his grandfather and father were members of the Ku Klux Klan, Bob Zellner escaped the hold of a long tradition of racism to become a freedom rider and a participant in the Civil Rights Movement. Zellner came to the university Feb. 13 to share his story and his insight into the Civil Rights Movement and how its future rests in the hands of the youth of America. When he was young, Zellner’s father, a See Rights, Page 5

See Obituary, Page 4

minister, decided to leave the Klan, helping Zellner develop his antipathy towards racism. “It affected me very much when dad quit the Klan,” Zellner said. “His father disowned him and his brothers never spoke to him again, but my mother was so happy that she took his Klan robes and cut them up and made them into white shirts for us to go to church and Sunday school.” Zellner first became involved in the Civil Rights movement through a sociology assignment that he worked on with four other students at Huntingdon College. “I was given a sociology assignment to study the racial problem,” Zellner said. “Five of us went to meet Dr. King, and we met Rosa Parks and the people who made the Montgomery Bus Boycott.” Zellner received substantial abuse from white racists


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