BOG forced to increase UNC tuition By AMY TANNER Staff Writer When students opened their tuition bills this summer, they found that it costs more to be a UNC student than it used to. Tuition for the academic year has in creased 10 percent for in-state students and 26 percent for out-of-state students. In state students will pay $480 in tuition for the 1983-84 year as opposed to last year's rate of $436. Out-of-state tuition this year is $2,842 and last year's rate was $2,260. University officials were unsure last week how the tuition increases would af fect the enrollment of minority and out-of-state students. Enrollment figures are ex pected to be available as soon as a head count of this year's freshman class can be taken. "I always regret any necessary increase because of those who barely had it worked out to come," said Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham III. "It's a modest price, but it's still important to keep it down." Most financial aid was granted before the tuition hike, and therefore the awards did not make up for the added expense of tuition, said Eleanor Morris, director of student aid. "The lateness of the decision has caused great problems for students and families," Morris said. Out-of-state students can write to the financial aid office and request additional aid. "If an out-of-state student needs extra aid, and I don't see why they wouldn't it was such a substantial increase they can apply," Morris said. August 25, 1983 Date of Billing Social Security Number August 23, 1983 Payments Received Thru Area Code 91 9 Telephone 962-1 368 UNIVERSITY CASHIER Hours: 8:30 to 3:30 UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA Uony-Fray 103 BYNUM HALL, 008-A CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA 27SI4 STATEMENT OF STUDENT ACCOUNT Tuttm mi taas art dut it rtistratio tut must be ptd by the ltd di of refiArtfiOR tor tack aemetfar Accounts not paid ra fun by th last day of refijtratioii we subiect to a lata payment tat and possibl distflroUmmt. Please make checks payablt to the Unraamtii of North Cantata and mail or bring top hall of bill along nth pgr remittance to the aboat eddrm. Pitas heap this office advised of ysw correct mailing address "Chartes and payments reflected a this statement are through the date indicated Any charges or payments after this date will be reflected on the nest statement. All sub sequent chargts must be paid prior to any future registration, issuance of a transcript, or award of a diploma or certificate. (SUtmtKSIK) Statement for the Account of . JOHN DOE DATE DATE I DESCRIPTION OF CHARGES, PAYMENTSjOR ADJUSTMENTS I CHARGES "1 PAYADJ. 1 BALANCE 082583 North Carolina Tuition, Fall 1983 J240. I 00 $240:1 00 082583 Student Fees, Fall 1983 142. 75 382. 75 082583 Room Rent, Fall 1983 445. 00 827. 75 082583 082583 082583 DESCRIPTION OF CHARGES, PAYMENTS. OR ADJUSTMENTS Nonresident Tuition, Fall 1983 Student Fees, Fall 1983 Room Rent, Fall 1983 CHARGES $1421 142 445 00 75 00 PAYADJ. BALANCE $1,421 1,563 2,008 $2,008 00 75 75 75 $827.j 75 E AMOUNT Monday, August 29, 1983The Daily Tar Heel9A Students must sign draft form to get financial aid PAY ABOVE AMOUNT The Student Aid Office will probably not award extra money to in-state students because the tuition increase is less than $100, she said. "We're keeping a folder of those who have applied, and at the end of September we will start to see how far our money will go," Morris said. There should be enough money for those students applying, but the money will probably be in the form of loans or work Students on financial aid can get checks this week at Vance Hall By JOSEPH BERRYHILL Staff Writer Financial aid the lifeblood for many UNC students will be distributed at Vance Hall this week, and most students receiving aid should be able to pick up their checks, said Eleanor Morris, UNC director of student aid. "Most everybody whose application was completed on time and who returned papers on time will get a check," Morris said. The checks that the Student Aid Office will be distributing this week come from .various grant, scholarship and loan, pro grams at the federal and state level, Morris said. Approximately 6,000 checks are ready to be distributed to about 4,000 students, Morris said. Some students receive more than one check. Most students expecting job assign ments in the Work-Study program should also be able to pick up those assignments next week. About 700 Work-Study assignments will be ready to distribute this week, and only students who applied late or who are re ceiving a late award should not have a job assignment. But assignments for about 100 graduate students who will become teaching as sistants under a new Work-Study program may be delayed, Morris said. The Student Aid Office is working with University academic departments to complete the assignments as soon as possible, she add ed. About 9,000 UNC students receive stu dent aid, Morris said. Only 4,000 will re ceive aid checks this week because of late applications and the fact that aid is given throughout the year, she added. About 10 percent of recipients also re ceive their checks directly from lending institutions and not the Student Aid Of fice, Morris said. A switch-over to an automated system caused some delay in the processing of checks this year, but overall the system has worked well, Morris said. "We've finished more checks this year than we had at this time last year," she said. The financial aid checks and job assignments will be distributed by the Stu dent Aid Office from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. to day through Thursday at Vance Hall with an alphabetical system based on students' last names. Friday will be a make-up day for students who do not pick up their checks on the correct day.,;i 1m & An official from the Student Aid Office will be near the end of the line to inform students if their checks are not ready, Morris said. "A student doesn't need to worry about getting in line for 45 minutes and then get ting here and finding there's no check," she said. Morris advised students to come by Vance Hall later in the afternoon to avoid lines which usually form in the morning. The number of students in line should be about the same this year as last year because the Student Aid Office has had about the same amount of money to distri bute, Morris said, adding that budget cuts had not hurt the system this year. "Congress has not granted the budget cuts that the (Reagan) administration has proposed," she said. "Congress strongly supports programs like Work-Study," she added. About 1,000 UNC students accept jobs under the Work-Study program, Morris said. But the number of students who work for their financial aid could increase in the future, she said. "Over the next decade, I think there ,is going to be an emphasis on work," she said. "Federal programs will emphasize work." 'DTH' needs photographers The Daily Tar Heel photography department will hire one staff photographer and one stringer for the fall semester. Experience is a requirement. Anyone interested should bring a port folio or other examples of their work by the DTH office any afternoon before Thursday at 3:00. Ask to see the photo editor. YE OLE WAFFLE SHOP Mori. -Sat. 7:00 iam-1 0:00 pm Sun. 9:00 am-9:00 pm Serving breakfast food and burgers A LANDMARK OF CONSISTENTLY HIGH QUALITY CHINESE FOOD IN DOWNTOWN CHAPEL HILL FOR THE LAST 5 YEARS. it WW. Th Geld?nCr23en A PLACE WHERE THE CONNOISSEURS OF CHINESE CUISINE CAN ENJOY A DELICIOUS MEAL. ' Always fresh Always the best ovoilable ingredients Always at o low cost Always served with efficiency so your wait is never very long 130 E. Franklin St. Open 7 days o week 929-5728 11 om-8 pm programs. "There isn't enough scholar ship money to compensate," Morris said. Students interviewed on campus hadl mixed reactions to the tuition hike. "I think the increase is a little much for all at once," said Karen Henry, a fresh man from New Providence, N.J. "One of the advantages of tuition being lower than comparable schools is that UNC can at tract quality students who otherwise might not have been able to attend." Bob Cook, a sophomore from Albany, Ga., said he has felt the effects of the tui tion increase. "It has forced me to get a job, and this makes it harder on me because normally I would not have worked," Cook said. Brad Knight, a sophomore from Westerville, Ohio, said it was "a sign of poor financial management to increase tui tion 26 percent in one year. Hopefully the 26 percent increase didn't turn anyone away who would have added to the Chapel Hill community." By JOSEPH BERRYHILL Staff Writer If you are a UNC male eligible for the draft who expects to receive a federal financial aid check this week, you've got to sign on the dotted line first. Draft-eligible males must submit a form to the Student Aid Office certifying they have registered for the draft before they can receive federally funded financial aid. Female students born before 1960 and those less than 18 years of age must also sign the form, specifying the reason they have not registered for the draft. "Any student who has not already signed the form and who is going to get financial aid next week will have to sign that statement," said Eleanor Morris, UNC director of student aid. About 2,800 of the 9,000 UNC students who receive financial aid have already completed and submitted the compliance forms, Morris said. Since July 1, the UNC Student Aid Of fice has not been distributing any financial aid checks to students who have not com pleted the form. On July 1, a law linking draft registration and the eligibility for federal student aid took effect. The law, which is an amendment to the Military Selective Service Act, was passed . by Congress on Sept. 8, 1982. It specifies that any student required to register with the Selective Service must do so or become ineligible for federal student aid. Programs which are funded by federal student aid include the Pell Grant, Guaranteed Student Loan and College Work-Study programs. Colleges mav continue to distribute funds to students who have not completed the compliance form until Oct. 1 , provided they collect the forms later. Several actions by the Department of Education and Con gress have resulted in the extension of this grace period for colleges from Aug. 1 to Oct. 1. But Morris said that distributing finan cial aid checks to students without collect ing the forms is inefficient, because the Student Aid Office must still go back and collect signatures, Morris said. "We decided to go ahead and require it now, rather than go back and get it later," she said. If students who received aid refuse to sign the form later, their names must be turned in to federal officials by the Student Aid Office, she added. "Collecting the forms now is in the best interest of the students and University," Morris said. Morris said she was unsure if anyone has yet refused to sign the compliance form, because some students do not pick up checks for unknown reasons. If a check is not picked up by a student, it is automatically cancelled, she said. "But to my knowledge, no one has just flat out refused to sign it (the form)," Morris said. Morris said the law would create more paperwork for the Student Aid Office. "It will slow the line down," she said. Morris also said she disagreed with the method of enforcing the selective service legislation. "It doesn't seem to me that in the distribution of student aid that that's the place to enforce another law," she said. nil We reserve the right to limit quantities none sold to dealers Prices effective through Saturday, September 3, 1983 nim'iniinllnn I I n I i i rill-mrnmir f I rinmii n minim n .iiiiiiiiii iiiii ,ii.,il,i.,mii-liil-i in iriirl V & 'QV!f9ir Mui waff CottoncilH Bathroom Tissue 4 Roll pk. 990 Chef Boy Ar Dee, All items, 10 oz. 1 : -; u ; Pizza 88$ Pet Ritz, All items, 14 oz. Cream Pies 59$ Banquet, 2 lb. Fried Chicken $2.59 Shedd's, Smooth or Crunchy, 16 oz. Old Fashioned Peanut Butter $1.39 Plain or Self Rising, 5 lb. Pillsbury Flour . 79$ Kraft, Quart Mayonnaise $1.39 Richfood, 48 oz. Vegetable Oil $1.79 Alpo Beef Chunks, 14 oz. Dog Food 3$1.00 $1.00 off Label, 25 lb. Purina Dog Chow $5.99 Bold, 49 oz. Laundry Detergent $1.89 Star-Kist Chunk Light Tuna in Oil or Water 6V2 oz. 69$ Fresh Start, 50$ off Label, 34 V2 oz Laundry Detergent $2.99 Stoned, 10.6 oz. Wheat Thins 99$ Popsrite, 4 lb. bag Pop Corn $1.49 Bonus Pk. 200 ft. Plus 50 ft. free, 250 ft. Handi Wrap ... $1.09 Del Monte, 46 oz. . Pineapple Juice . . 99$ Jack and The Bean Stalk Cut or French Sliced, 16 oz. Bean 289$ Patterson, 8 oz. Hot Dog Chili . . . 59$ Solo, 16 oz. Party Cups . . 69$ Dixie, 9", 100's Everyday Plates 79$ 1 ,' . r.z?' Ice Cream Va gal. Breyers $1 .99 Minute Maid, 6 oz. Orange Juice 2$1.00 Gold Label, 10 oz. Petite Peas 59$ w-. urounci ISIHIIISSS 3 lb. or more lb. 820 Whole Beef, lb., (Cut Free) Tenderloins ... $3.69 Boneless, lb. New York Strip Steaks ...... $2.99 T Bone Steak, lb $2.99 Sirloin Steak, lb . . . $2.89 Boneless Sirloin Steak, lb $2.99 Rib Eye Steak, lb $4.59 Sirloin Tip Steak, lb. $2.49 Boneless Chuck Steak, lb $1.69 Boneless Chuck Roast, lb. . . . $1.49 Short Ribs Beef, lb $1.29 6 Old South, 12 gal. Orange Juice 99$ Parkay, 1 lb. Margarine 1Vs 289$ All items, 16 oz. Dannon Yogurt 69$ Richfood, 24 oz. Cottage Cheese $1.49 FOWLER'S BARBEQUE SPECIAL Fresh Fryer Leg 14s 101b. bag $4.99 ' v. Fcntana Di Papa, Magnum Colli Red or White $3.69 Alexis Lichine, 5th Sancerre 1978 . $4.89 Moreau Blanc, 5th White French Table Wine . . . $3.39 Chateau Timberlay, 5th White $3.69 Regular, 12 oz. cans Coors Beer 12S5.15 Regular, 12 oz. cans Budweiser Beer 6S2.65 Triple Cola Diot or Regular Ail Flavors Q,$) 2 Liter rr88 Fowler's Breakfast Bundle 1 lb. Yorktown Bsccn 1 lb. Richfood Sauccrp 1 Doz. Larga Whito EzZ 1 7V2 oz. Pillsbury Biccuit J 3 lb. bag Yellow Onions 89$ Freestone Peaches, lb. 39$ Mcintosh, 3 lb. bag Red Apples 99$ Daily's Little Hug, All Flavors Fruit Drinks 10S1.00 Persian Limes 1079$ Carrots, 1 lb. bag 399$