The Michigan Daily-- Friday, November 4, 1983-- Page 5 Tuition soars; blacek students flee (Continued from page 1) ficials discourage black students from applying to the University because of the social climate. "'BLACK STUDENTS' feel thta prejudice exists greatly here. They feel as though they won't be able to handle it," he said. But Carswell also laid some of the blame on black students themselves. "An education is worth clearing some (social) obstacles," he said. "The students who don't do that are cheating themselves." Peter Ford, a resident student staff member at Trotter House, the Univer- sity's minority center, said rising tuition costs, especially for out-of-state students, are a key reason behind the drop in black enrollment. "I MEAN LET'S face it," he said. "Since I've been in this school, out-of- state tuition has gone up over half. That's going to keep people from coming here." Black enrollment levels in most of the University's schools and colleges are down. The School of Library Science reported one of the most dramatic decreases. Last year 9.3 percent of the students enrolled in that school were black. this year, black enrollment only accounts for 5.9 percent of the school's students. In the School of Natural Resources, black enrollment has decreased by half This year there are only three black students enrolled in the school. These students account for .6 percent of SNR's total enrollment. Last year 1.2 percent of the students in SNR were black. The school of social work also recor- ded a major decrease in the number of black students. This year only 8.4 per- cent of its students are black, down from last year's figure of 10.3 percent. In the school of education, the percen- tage of black students has slipped from 13.3 percent to 11.9 percent. AP Photo While picketers march outside a Greyhound bus terminal in Montgomery, Ala. yesterday, Nathaniel Pruitt fills out a job ' application. Greyhound officials announced yesterday that bus service would reopen in two weeks whether or not they -r reach an agreement with striking workers. r- s ~Greyhound to reum service despite srik e For$1 yucan have law school all wrpped up. A decision to go into law shouldn't be based on guesswork. It doesn't have to be. For just $10, you can receive The Law Package. A comprehensive four-part program that will supply'you with infor- mation about a variety of career options open to a law school grad- uate. Provide you with detailed information on five law schools that interest you. And even include a tryout Law School Admis- sion Test (LSAT). Once you've completed the tryout LSAT and returned its answer sheet with your data form, you'll receive your test results. You'll be able to identify your strong points and weak points, and evaluate your options. The Law Package gives you the facts you need to make an informed decision. Send for yours today. 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The Law Package, Law School Admission Services, Box 500, Newtown, PA 18940 Name I i Address I 1 1 City/State/Zip 1 I y 1 Make your $10 check payable to: Law School Admission..Services. 1 -L - - --- - - -- - -1--7 m--~cj From AP and UPI bus driver PHOENIX, Ariz. - Greyhound Lines said yesterday it PICKETING 14 d reopen its strikebound nationwide bus system within Bus Termina t b weeks, using either employees who agreed to take pay The Ama or hundreds of unemployed who want the strikers' jobs. rejected the %Qbhn Teets, chairman of the parent Greyhound Corp., set Union leader tt timetable for reopening the nation's largest bus system, reduction in shut down at midnight Wednesday when 12,000 employees No talks went on strike. night, a few The union a MORE THAN 7,000 drivers were participating in the reduce the it Walkout, begun over union rejection of a company-proposed Thousands pay cut it says is necessary to correct reported losses of $2 yesterday per mile on every route Greyhound operates. passengers Company spokesman Dorothy Lorant said that when minal. bperations resumed, striking employees would be invited to Rival con return to work. If they do not, she said, the company would honored Gre have no trouble filling their jobs. Amtrak also As pickets marched in front of depots, long lines of job ap- lines were r plicants appeared outside Greyhound offices in response to Trailways newspaper ads seeking new employees. But there was little that he had t animosity between pickets and the job applicants. help in the 'IF I was unemployed, I'd be in line, too," said 49-year-old year for inte aw fns woo interns Jesse Ellison of Buffalo, N.Y., WHO WAS G AT THE Niagara Frontier Transit Authority al in Buffalo. lgamated Council of Greyhound Union Locals company's proposal of a 9.5 percent pay cut. rs contended it would amount to a 20 to 25 percent wages and benefits. are scheduled. Negotiations broke off Monday hours before expiration of a three-year contract. and company agreed on a 48-hour extension to mpact on the general public. s of frustrated travelers experienced delays as Greyhound, which carried 57 million last year, parked its buses and locked its ter- mpanies added extra routes and buses and eyhound tickets to make up for the lost service. oaccepted Greyhound tickets. But long passenger eported in some places anyway. ticket clerk David Harper said in Tucson, Ariz. been laid off two weeks ago but was called back to crush. This normally is the slowest season of the rcity bus travel. ' },4- Ift (Continued from page 1) "(It) kills your enthusiasm for coming back to school," Peskind said of his high-paying internship. But he also said he knows "when you work there they're not going to spoil you." ONE ADVANTAGE of working for a firm outside of New York is that interns have a better chance of eventually becoming a partner, according to Peskind. If he were to stay on at Weissburg and Aronson, Peskind said he would have about a 95 percent chance of becoming a partner. At most New York firms, however, he said his chances would drop to 10 percent. Although many of the firms consider the fringe benefits essential to attrac- tihg top recruits, some University law professors see them as unnecessary ex- travagances. UNIVERISTY LAW prof. John Reed- doesn't blame the students for the way the systems works, but said (they) 'cannot be worth the money they are making" and called the firms "a little foolish." "If the high costs are hurting ayone," he said, "it's the clients with high legal (fees)." } "But third-year law student David bTillman disagrees with Reed. Tillman, who earned about $2,500 a month *orking for a Miami law firm last s%u'mmer, said he thinks the interns .deserve the high salaries they com- iand. "I WORKED very hard," said Tillman, who put in about 40 hours a week. "It's really not that much money." He also downplayed the fringe benefits that came with the job. "You get tired of going to all the social fun- ctions," he said. "It's not nearly as glamorous as people imagine." At the other end of the salary spec- trum are the law students who volun- teer their services over the summer or work for relatively low pay. MIKE MALINOWSKI, a second-year law student, earned $200 a week working for a Birmingham, Mich. lawyer. "People who go into law only for the money have a warped sense of drive," he said. But Peskind said he doesn't think most of the interns takedthesummer jobs for the money. "Not too many people are in it to make money," he said. "There are easier ways to make money than law." To aid their classmates who do work over the summer for little or no pay, University law students organized the Student Fund Fellowship. Under this program, students ear- ning high wages agree to donate a por- tion of their salaries to the fund. 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