Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / June 24, 1971, edition 1 / Page 6
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Thursday. 24, 1S71 31 O n 0 Hion dim aavanc 4k- es by Norman Black Staff Writer A bill that would nearly double the tuition for out-of-state students at North Carolina's tax-supported universities has passed the House and has been sent to the Senate. The bill was introduced in the House by Rep. William T. Watkins (D-Granville), and in the Senate by Senators John J. Burney (D-New Hanover) and Philip J. Baugh (D-Mecklenburg). rrr"i WANT NIXg 1U N IN '72? You Can Do It Now! 'a 't Great Ncw "WH0 CAN BEAT NIX0N" Game! Play ... Sen. Gorft McCovern Sen. Edward Kennedy Sen. Cdmund Muskie Sen. Harold Hughes Mayor John Lindsay Cov. George Wallace or President Nixon himself! The campaign is on . riiiht in your own home! And who k running .ic;jintt NixonT Sx Ijmous hupituls . plu any djrk horse of your own i boosing. It could even be you' Or. H your hi.irt belong to the Administration, you t an play Nixon-the-in umbt'nt anj i:ive everybody else a hard time! WHO CAN BEAT NIXON is a con test tor up to vvvn cluKinvrs .iMirM Richard M. Nuon tor the i'riMiicnt y ol the United States. To win. the iH.iilerwr or Nixon mut br tbe tirst to .nrt electoral voles ot the 5.V List by the state electoral colleges I'l.iycts obtain electoral votes by a coml-.natior ot money, media points, and the lm ot the dice. WHO CAN BEAT NIXON give IVcsi dent Nixon, js incumbent, certain ad .nj(.i" ot course These make it aiorrev :tm; Kscause at the enJ. he has to lace the single challenger who has eliminated all others Irom the race. WHO CAN BEAT NIXON i, lull ot pitt'alls-tor everybody ou'l! land on various states and buy their electoral votes, if you have enough money and media support. AND i' the state isn't pre-empted by the "home state" prin ciple WHO CAN HEAT NIXON allows you to draw MLU1A cards, and. you and the other candidates can be awarded -or punished by fictitious endorsements ot the press. You also draw EVENT cards -and ;u.t as in real lite your late is decided by the course ot these events. In the EVENT deck are PRIMARY sards These precipitate contests that eliminate contenders as the campaign draws to a close Nixon, naturally, can't be eliminated by PRIMARY cards, but be does run into spet tat problems c re- ated by the MEDIA and EVENT cards, and in unforeseen problems awaiting him on the board. Penalties set at places like CABINET SHAKE-IT. KICKBACK SCANDAL, and CREDIBILITY GAP make the Koing heavy. There's a place for PEACE, too. but only Niv.m wins an Eastern state when he lands there! WHO CAN BEAT NIXON is an ex citing, stimulating, fun-tilled game, ex asperating and rewarding as a real-lite campaign1 BILLY ARTHUR USTSAtf SNOffUM CWTH 9-9 Monday-Fridoy II 9- Saturday fl WHO CAN BEAT NIXON $698 Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Showed concern 6 Trite 11 Buccaneer 12 South American animals 14 In music, high 15 Titles 17 Affirmative vote 18 Chinese mile 19 Sun umbrella 21 Babylonian deity 22 Entices 24 Exists 25 Organs of hearing 27 Cry of cow 28 Preposition 29 Shield 30 Uttered words Indistinctly 33 Animal's coat 34 Indefinite article 35 Man's nickname 37 Ascend 38 Three-toed sloth 39 More unusual 41 Bone 42 Signatories 45 Prefix: with 46 Devoured 43 Experience 49 Suitable 50 Conduct 52 Swimmers 54 Woodworking machine 55 Worship 6 Consecrate 7 In addition 8 A continent (abbr.) 9 Wine cup 10 Strata 11 Become insipid 13 Oceans 16 Sustains 19 Nations 20 Inscriptions on medals 23 Flowers 26 Helped 28 Pronoun 29 Teutonic deity 37 31 Guido'slow 38 note 32 Printer's 39 measure 33 Ovule-bearing 40 organ of a seed 43 plant 36 Determine Answer to Yesterday's Purzle HUE 3lAGe jR flA ma SIS p Uf 6 ATE Is 1m I TES O 6 Nbo w S) ' I L I M N J k e e p p Cl ! poet npje i t y Q to s mia ' '-H 1" L Hp "TTS T E TUE LUL an t l E R5 Te rase T E R I C AHSMOG O R A sImia R TOA I R LInSTIr I O TOIE LjT N T E lj! k 1 T 0lEAlRrSlJslALlADfc' XX. Highway Semi-precious stone Mountain nymph Decays Constant irritating desire 44 47 49 51 53 Sicilian volcano Period of time Distant Latin conjunction Maiden love-,1 by Zeus DOWN Eyelash Skill Sun god Small stoves Loved one r3 4 5 6 7 8 9 K U H 15 16 Ta 19 20 22 23 "26 37 38 39 40 41 "4243 44 ""il 46 47 H4 49 w 153" 1 till twa i i i i rra Duttr. by UniUd Feature SndicaU. Inc. u The House passed the bill on its third reading, June 18. In the Senate, the bill has been sent to the Finance Committee for study. Out-of-state undergraduate students at all branches of the Consolidated University of North Carolina now pay $950 a year for tuition. This bill would increase that to $1800. The bill would affect graduate out-of-state tuition even more. Next year it would be raised to $2000 per year, the following year it would climb to $2500 per year The purpose of the bill, Watkins explained, is to equalize the amount of tuition that out-of-state students pay and the actual costs, estimated at $2,455 per student per year at UNC in Chapel Hill. The only serious objection to the bill in committee involved its effective date, which as written, would be the day the bill is ratified by the Assembly. The only amendment tacked on the bill in the House, involved the requirements for becoming an in-state student. The House version would now require a student to maintain a legal residence in N.C. for twelve months. The present requirement is six months. President William C. Friday and Felix Joyner, vice-president of finance, expressed concern over how such action would deter out-of-state students from applying to UNC. "I would assume a cost acceleration of this dimension would cause many applicants to reconsider," said Friday. And Joyner feels that "the number of out-of-state students would definitely decrease. A lot of people wouldn't be able to afford this raise. Watkins has said he does not think the higher tuition would reduce the number of non-resident students. "They accept less than one-fifth of those who apply," he said. "I assume the same number would have money enough to pay the (increased) tuition." William Geer, director of Student Aid, has reported it would take an additional $500,000 to assist just those students who are already on aid. This does not include those students who would quite possibly need aid if the bill passes. As Geer admitted, "We would not be able to take care of all of them." Geer also feels this is too much of a disproportionate increase. "We just raised out-of-state tuition by $250 last summer." This bill would also affect the future of athletics on this campus. Geer pointed out that there are currently 110 out-of-state athletes on Carolina squads. "It would take $93,500 to pay for their increased tuition." Walter Rabb, assistant athletic director, feels that the athletic program at Carolina has been faced with a tremendous task. "We'll simply have to find the funds. We're obligated to the students here on grant-in-aids to pay for their tuition. This could mean we would have to cut down on the size of our squads, road trips, etc. We have not set aside money for this increase." ALL YOU CAN u m mar m m m 95 12 Noon-2:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. -7 p.m (4 Meats, S Vegetables. S Saladt, ( dessert, Ice tea or coffee) Children 1.50 Open 7 Days a Week EAT Oil N.C. U W Mil Ttwn Hll, CJMM NHL Omh f: lJ. Oittf WE ACCEPT Master Charge, BaaVAmerlcarA, American Express, Ccrta BlaadM aa4 DJatra CtsA 1 11:30A.M.-2:30P.M. 4:45 P.M.-11:30 P.M. THERATHSKELLER - Early Bird Special Mon.-Thurs. 4:45-6:00 PIZZA-y2 PRICE Plain Or Pepperoni EVERYONE'S FAVORITE Open Mon.-Sat.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 24, 1971, edition 1
6
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