The State Bar Association of North Dakota Summer 2014 Gavel Magazine | Page 10

IN TRANSITION and bar services are all located in the Strinden Center. Much of our collection is maintained in O’Kelly in the old medical library stacks, and the rest is in long-term storage awaiting completion of the building project. In the University’s Chester Fritz Library, our students have been afforded a study area reserved for their exclusive use during relocation. K AT H R Y N R . L . R A N D Dean, University of North Dakota School of Law Greetings from UND School of Law, now located in multiple buildings across the University of North Dakota campus! I write this from the fourth floor of Twamley Hall, the University’s main administrative building and where our Office of Student Life and most of our Dean’s Office is now located. If I crane my neck, from our Twamley windows I can see the Carnegie building, O’Kelly Hall, the old Strinden Center, and—off in the distance—Dakota Hall, where the rest of our faculty and staff offices are temporarily located. Strolling over to the meeting rooms in the basement of Swanson Hall, where I’m scheduled to give a guest lecture in one of our summer courses, I pass Gamble Hall, Witmer Hall, Upson II, the Education building, Gillette, Merrifield, and Leonard Hall—we’ll hold classes in each of these buildings during the 2014-2015 academic year. Our law library is operating out of both Strinden and O’Kelly. Public access and student, faculty, and bench 10 THE GAVEL This is a time of transition for the School of Law. It’s incredibly exciting—we can’t wait to see the new addition go up! And it’s also stressful for our students, faculty, and staff, all of whom are enduring the hardships of relocation. Our faculty and staff are in cubicles and shared offices, our students don’t have enough work and study space as we’re using every available room to hold classes, we don’t have dedicated space for speakers and events, and our community is spread across campus. And yet, when I ask people, “How are you doing—are you getting along in our temporary space?” without exception I hear, “I’m getting along because the building project is worth it—we need it for the future of the law school.” Every single student and every single employee is lending a hand to ensure the success of the law school’s building project. That’s teamwork. That’s pulling together. That’s community. And it’s in that same spirit of community that we ask you, members of our bench and bar, alumni and friends, to lend us a hand, too. You’ve already shown your support in so many ways we hesitate to call on you again. But we need your help. With rapidly increasing construction costs in the state, we need private donations to help us complete the full scope of our building project, including classrooms, student study and work space, and student services space. As you already know, the full scope of the building project is critical to our status as an accredited law school, critical to the quality of our educational program, and critical to the future of the School of Law and North Dakota’s legal profession. The students educated in the new and improved law school building will be the next generation of judges, law firm partners, rural lawyers, and community leaders. I hope you’ll join me, and many others, in making a donation to the UND School of Law Building Fund to help us reach our $2.5 million target and complete this historic and transformative building project. We will have once-in-a-lifetime naming opportunities for those of you with the means to make major gifts. But we know all of you have the heart if not the means, and we are truly grateful for your support in whatever amount or form. On behalf of our faculty and staff, on behalf of our current students and future graduates, and on behalf of the generations of attorneys who will follow in your footsteps, thank you for your commitment to North Dakota’s law school!