i S3) Vol. C3(rio.143f Chrpcl Kill, r:crth Ccrcfrw, t:cndsy, April 21, 1975 Founded Fcbaicry 23, 1C33 TTXTO JP- Uixj roiroDiffts nvemi tie&.dhiiinig awsurd. -X: " ra A i " ! ? r-, ; f . L , i 1 - A , I Warm Spring weather brought large crowds to the annual Apple Chill Fair Sunday afternoon. Franklin Street was, closed to traffic to make way for displays by local artists end craftsmen, music by local bands, magic and puppet shows,. O'Neal selection debated Nom by Art Eisenstadt Staff Writer The . Campus Governing Council (CGC) Administration Committee voted to report without prejudice the nomination of Mike O'Neal as student body treasurer Sunday. Q'HeaU a graduate journalism student from Hendersonville, had been nominated as treasurer by Student Body President Bill Bates last week. The committee's action, which A Staff pfwio by ItartfM SImmm Mike O'Neal i 1 V"- 'J ' i M en netters win ACQ by Grant Vosburgh Staff Writer DURHAM The Carolina netters chipped in seven first-place points toward the 1975 Carmichael Cup yesterday by capturing the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament title at Duke. It was the Tar Heels' 19th conference championship. UNC was led by junior sensation Billy Brock, who downed Duke's Mark Meyers in Sunday's flight one finals, 7-6, 7-5. Brock won flight three last year. Meyers, who lost to Brock last Saturday at Chapel Hill 6-0, 6-2, beat N.C. State's Randy Merritt on Friday and defending ACC champion John Lucas of Maryland Saturday to advance to the final match. As the top seed, Brock had a bye on Friday. He downed Wake Forest's Chuck Straley 6-2, 4-6, 6-4 in Saturday's semifinals.: The flight one finale began with a hard serving Meyers winning the first five points of the match. Each player won while serving throughout the set, necessitating a nine point tiebreaker. Brock took the first point off of a Meyers serve. Meyers then won. the next two, including Brock's first service. Each swapped the following four points to give Meyers a 4-3 advantage. But on back-to-back net volleys, Brock came back to win . the set point. Meyers broke Brock's serve immediately in the second set but could not hold his own !to even the score at 1-1. At this point Brock Apple Chill Fair volleyball and other games in sponsored each year by the Department. ination sent followed a tie vote, Sunday means the nomination will come to the CGC floor Tuesday without either a favorable or unfavorable recommendation. CGC must approve a treasurer's appointment by a two-thirds vote. The committee voted to move into a rare executive session when ONeal's nomination first came up last Tuesday. Sources on and off the committee indicated the session was used to probe alleged misuse of the Residence Hall Association (RHA) budget during the period O'Neal worked with that organization between 1972 and 1974. However, CGC Speaker Dan Besse said Sunday that he had not been able to. validate the suspicions. Committee, chairperson Dave Rittenhbuse also circulated a letter from Frances W. Sparrow, director of the Student Activities Fund, which said that an audit of the RHA budget for the period between 1972 and 1975 discovered no questionable activities. Besse objected to O'Neal's nomination because he said O'Neal does not have enough accounting experience for the job, has been very closely aligned with the RHA and the Campus Program Council and, has overstepped his authority on at least two occasions when he was RHA president. In response to questioning, O'Neal said he has never taken an accounting course. O'Neal has served as treasurer of Avery dormitory, RHA and the won nine straight points, for an apparent commanding lead over Meyers, the 1973 champion. But with several nice backhand shots to the opposite corner and down the lines, Meyers pulled to 5-3. Then down 300 he surged back to break Brock's service and then hold his own, tieing the set 5-5. In the eleventh, Brock won his fifth deuce (40-40) game and proceeded to take the subsequent game for the 1975 singles championship. "I guess the turning point was winning that tiebreaker," Brock said. "I think that if Mark would've gotten that last point, he would have probably gone on to win." Commenting on his slow start, Brock said, "I couldn't get on top of his serves in the first two services. I was a little nervous, too. If he had broken my serve early, I might never have gotten going." Carolina also picked up flight two, three and five singles championships. Senior Joe Garcia notched a second win over Claude England of Maryland 6-2, 6-7, 6-1 for the second flight title. Garcia had defeated the 5-foot-2 New Zealander in a dual meet last' Thursday. , Junior Tommy Dixon won the flight three competition with a quick 6-3, 6-0 decision over Maryland's Fred Winckelmann and Southpaw sophomore Dave Oberstein took flight five honors, tripping up top-seeded Tony James of Maryland 7-6, 6-1. Fourth-seeded Cliff Skakle lost to Duke's Bob Bitler in the final match of flight six. The UNC freshman had previously won first and the street. The event Is Chapel Hill Recreation to CGC Campus Program Council, but Besse said the student body treasurer's job is much more complex than those. O'Neal said he was confident he could handle the job. Besse also said O'Neal's past strong association with the RHA and the. program council could prejudice him. "There are times when the treasurer has to make very arbitrary decisions," Besse said. O'Neal has served on RHA since it was founded and served as its president from March through October 1974, when he was forced to resign because he was a resident of Craige dorm, not in RHA. O'Neal also founded and was the first president of Campus Program Council which books entertainment for! dormitory and Greek residence units. Besse also said O'Neal overstepped his authority as RHA president by overturning an election for the Women's Residence Council presidency and by trying to introduce an amendment to the RHA counstitution which would have' allowed Craige to become an RHA member automatically. O'Neal defended his action in the first case by saying that the election was improperly held and denied the second charge. "Anything that was brought up against me is easily disprovable," O'Neal said. "CGC shouldn't vote on personalities. This is politics as usual, and I just think that's regrettable." AW s . i ii m :':;:;i'::;::X::v;:::.::;;;:;.i::;: J" N Stall photo fcf Martta Billy Brock second round contests, including a 6-2, 7-5 upset of top-seeded John Pierce of Wake Forest. In doubles, top-seeded Brock and Dixon, handed 1973 champs, Maryland's Lucas and Winckelmann, a 6-4, 6-4 defeat. Garcia and Earl Hassler lost to Duke's Ted Daniel and Chip Davis 6-4, 2-6, 6-7 to take runner-up honors in flight two. The final set went down to the final tiebreaker point before the Blue Devil duo pulled out the win. - by Greg Nye Staff Writer Distinguished teaching awards went to nine Chapel Hill professors Friday at the Faculty Council meeting. Tanner Awards for excellence in undergraduate teaching were presented to Dr. Robert G. Kirkpatrick Jr., associate professor of English; Dr. Ned A. Smith, assistant professor of zoology; Dr. George Schlesingcr, professor of philosophy and Dr. B. Wesley Hadzija, assistant professor of pharmacy. The Tanner Awards give instructors Panel to consider new SHS Representatives of the Student Health Service (SHS) will meet today with the University Building and Grounds Committee to review plans for a new student health center to be located in a wooded area near Kenan Stadium. The proposed site for the 58,000 sq. ft. facility is east of old Nurse's Dormitory in the Memorial Hospital complex. Since the area is thickly wooded, the committee is concerned over the number of trees that will be cut down for the construction. The new facility will replace the present 17,000 sq. ft. SHS complex at N.C. Memorial Hospital. The structure will house facilities for clinical services, sports medicine, health education, mental health, nursing and administration. , Maurice W. Lee, committee chairperson, said his committee reviews plans for every by Art Eisenstadt Staff Writer Following a week of hearing Student Government budget requests, the Campus Governing Council (CGC) Finance Committee has begun cutting $ 1 29,063 from the 1975-76 requests. The completed budget will be heard and acted upon by the CGC Tuesday in its final meeting of the year. Total Student Government revenue next year will be about $320,000, financed by activities fees of $9 per semester for' undergraduates and $7 per semester for graduate students. - , . According to the Student Government. Constitution, the Carolina Union automatically receives one-third of student fees or $108,675 this year. Together with the $310,388.34 requested by 54 organizations, total funding requests exceed revenue by $99,063.34. In addition, committee chairperson Bill Strickland wants to hold $30,000 in unappropriated funds for use during the year. "This is a critical period in Student Government," Strickland told the women by Kevin Darrl3 Staff Writer Team depth proved the deciding factor in the North Carolina Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (NCA1AW) tennis tournament this past weekend, as Carolina's women netters won the team title despite losing both the singles .and doubles titles to Duke. . UNC outscored the Blue Devils 38-36, thus winning the team trophy for the second year in a row. Appalachian State edged Salem College 17' to 17 for third place in the 14-team field, while UNC-G finished fifth. In the singles championship match, Carolina's Jane Preyer stormed to an early 5 2 lead, and Duke's Cindy Johnson looked as if she might not retain her crown. But Johnson came back to tie at 5-5, before dropping the set, 7-5. Johnson prevailed in the last two sets, however, taking an easy 6-1 win in the second, then staving off a Preyer rally in the third to take the set, 6-3. In doubles, Beth Hamilton and Preyer, the doubles top-seed, were then upset by no. 4 seed, Duke's Patty Mays and Theresa Donahue. The UNC duo gained an early 5-2 advantage in the first set, then fell behind 6 5. Hamilton and Preyer forced the match into a tiebreaker, then lost that game 5-4. The second set also went to a tiebreaker, with the Duke pair winning it, 5-3. Carolina's Nina Cloaninger and Rebecca CGC SI, 000 for "excellent and inspirational teaching." The awards were presented by Chancellor N. Fere bee Taylor. Professors were nominated this year for the Tanner Awards by a campuswide student and faculty vote. Winners of the Amoco Foundation Awards are recognized for superior undergraduate instruction. The professors each receive $1,000 from the Foundation. The Amoco Awards went to Alan Stern, assistant professor of political science; Dr. Ernest L. Eliel, Kenan Professor of Chemistry and David M. Griffiths, associate professor of history. building new building before construction begins. The object of his committee, Lee said, will be to see that a minimum number of trees is cut down for the building. He said the health center problem is similar to that of a possible enlargement of Kenan Stadium. Committee member John Sawyer said last week an architect's plans and model had been approved by a student-faculty committee on student health before his committee saw the plans. Sawyer, a graduate, student in public health, said last week he expected the differences to be resolved at today's meeting. . Lee said a study to determine what damage would be done to the trees could not be made until the architect had made his drawings. University Planning Office personnel have refused to comment on the student health center. committee at the beginning of Thursday night's meeting. "We have apparently reached a point of maximum growth as far as current revenue will go." Strickland said the committee had four options in how to handle the deficit: leaving no unappropriated balance, drawing from the general surplus, raising student fees or changing the committee's guidelines to accommodate the organizations as much as possible. Recommending the fourth course of action, Strickland urged several guidelines to the committee: creating centralized secretarial, Xerox, maintenance and speakers services, looking critically at salaried positions and social categories, encouraging greater outside sources of revenue and cutting areas which would involve a minimal loss of services. The centralization programs were designed by Student Body President Bill Bates as part of his program to cut costs in Student Government. The Finance Committee, of which Bates is a member, decided to accept all of Strickland's suggestions except for the secretarial pool in an informal vote. The committee examined the budget take state Garcia gave the Tar Heels the team trophy with their upset of no. 2 seed Duke's Johnson and Emily Waugh. After splitting the first two sets, the UNC duo came from a 3-0 deficit to win the deciding set 6-4. In Sunday's doubles final, Mays and Donahue took the title with a 6-2, 7-6 win over Cloaninger and Garcia. Going into Saturday's matches, UNC led 36-32 and needed only two victories to clinch the title. One victory came in a semifinal singles match, as no. 4 seed Preyer upset no. 2 seed UNCs Carney Timberlake, to gain the. finals. For a while, the Tar Heels looked as if they would not get another win. Third-seed Hamilton dropped her semifinal match to top-seed Johnson 6-3, 6-4. Hamilton gained an early lead in thejecond set, but just could not cope with the Duke player's exceptional baseline game. Duke led the tournament 24-22 after the first day of play, before the Tar Heels came roaring back Friday, eliminating four Duke singles players and one Blue Devil doubles team. Preyer had more difficulty in her quarterfinal. Playing Duke's Mays, Preyer won the. first set 6-4, then dropped the next one 6-3. In.dpybles,. Carolina's Linda Matthews and Jean Scott dumped Davis and Margaret .Duncan of Duke 6-3, 6-4, before losing in the quarters to ' teammates Garcia and Cloaninger, 6-0, 3-6, 6-2. Dr. C. Hugh Holman, Kenan Professor of English, was named the winner of the Thomas Jefferson Award. The award is given each year to the instructor whose campus activities "show the integrity and character that marked the life of Thomas Jefferson." Holman is a special assistant to Taylor and is chairperson of the committee drawing up the five-year plan for the University. The Nicholas Salgo Distinguished Teaching Award was presented to Professor Carol P. Fray of the School of Nursing. Fray is chairperson of the Department of Medical Surgery Nursing. Newly-elected Student Body President Bill Bates spoke at the the council meeting. He asked the faculty to work with student leaders for academic reform. "Innovative programs are at a standstill at this University," Bates said. Varying course credit according to course workload, extending drop-add and creating more efficient registration periods are needed, he told the council. "Will you accept the challenge or retreat into the safety of academia?" Bates asked the faculty. In other action at the Faculty Council meeting, a committee was formed to study the impact of having pluses and minuses recorded on student transcripts. James R. Leutze, associate professor of history, recommended the formation of the committee, saying students would find grading more satisfactory. "We could recognize those students who are achieving more than others in their grade category." Leutze said students should be represented in the committee's study of the grading program. "Students are very intimately involved in the impact of such a program." The impact study committee will report back to the Faculty Council by October 1975. .cunfts requests line by line and approved the following appropriations Thursday night (with original requests in parentheses): Student Government Executive Branch, $25,550 ($28,670); Elections Board, $1,035 ($1,060); Audit Board $100 (unchanged); Transportation Commission $180 ($522); Student Government Judicial Branch, $1,730 ($2,895); and Student Government Legislative Branch, $975 ($1,280). Media Board, $590 ($600); Daily Tar Heel, $30,000 ($30,200); Yackety- Yack, $8,800 ($8,791); Cellar Door, $1,500 ($1,537); WCAR, $14,950 and Carolina Quarterly, $3,500 (both unchanged). Most of the media have outside sources of revenue, too. The committee also appropriated $ 1 0,200 to the Residence Unit Grant and Loan Fund, $1,000 for a Student Health Service research internship, and $1,000 for a central Xerox and maintenance fund. On Friday, the committee made the following appropriations: Academic Action Committee (formerly Academic Affairs, Course-Teacher Evaluation and Carolina Course Review Committees), $9,300 ($16,120) and summer YM-YWCA, $600 ($6,050). .vw.'i . .w.;. . .-Mir ' : 5. V S48fl photo bf Ntor Rw Jane Preyer