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Wake Forest University (WFU) is a private research university in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States.Founded in 1834, the university received its name from its original location in Wake Forest, north of Raleigh, North Carolina.
The Wake Forest University School of Business is the business school of Wake Forest University, a private research university in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. It offers undergraduate programs to around 1,314 students, as well as management-related masters programs. [ 1 ]
Wake Forest University School of Medicine is the medical school of Wake Forest University, with two campuses located in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and Charlotte, North Carolina, United States. It is affiliated with Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist , the academic medical center whose clinical arm is Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist.
The Z. Smith Reynolds Library (also known as ZSR Library) is the main library of Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. An eight-story building, it is located on the university's main (Reynolda) campus, a short distance south of the T. K. Hearn Plaza (the quad). The library opened in 1956.
The Wake Forest School of Business Administration was founded in 1949 by Professor Gaines M. Rogers, with seven or eight full-time faculty, and offering two degrees: B.S and B.B.A. In 1968 Rogers resigned as dean of the school, and was replaced by Harvard finance professor Robert S. Carlson, who instituted the school's first MBA program.
It was voted into existence on May 19, 1950, at the SBC annual meeting [6] and began offering classes in the fall of 1951 [6] on the original campus of Wake Forest University (then Wake Forest College) in Wake Forest, North Carolina. The undergraduate program is called The College at Southeastern. [7] The current president is Daniel L. Akin.
Hearn Plaza (also known as The Quad or Upper Quad; formerly known as University Plaza) [1] is the main quadrangle at Wake Forest University's North Campus in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States. [2] Completed in 1956, along with many of the surrounding buildings, it is named for Thomas K. Hearn, the twelfth president of the university. [2]
Whaples began teaching at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 1988. He moved to Wake Forest University in 1991, and was chair of the economics department there from 2006 to 2013. [1] He served as book review editor of EH.Net since 1996 to 2021 and was director of EH.Net from 2003 to 2008.