T The Caroliiva Joernal — Student Publication Of The University Of North Carolina At Charlotte Volume 5 Wednesday, January 14, 1970 No. 13 70-71 tuition to increase By Peggy Caldwell The general rise in the cost of living will be reflected in increases in the cost of higher education for the 1970-1971 Academic year. In-state students at UNCC are now paying $318 for tuition and fees, a 6.0 Parcent increase over last year's fee of $300. Out-of-state student's costs show aven greater escalation, with a 20.4 Parcent increase over 1968-69 tuition and ^ae rates. These students are now paying $993 to attend the University, in ®oniparison with last year's rate of $825. According to Mr. K.C. Batchelor, ^NCC Business Manager, the cost of ®ducation will continue to rise next year. At UNCC, the cost of tuition will rise h'om $175 to $225 for in-state students from $850 to $950 for out-of-state students. . What are the reasons for these increases? Each state-sponsored institution of higher learning in North f^rolina submits its budget, including njcome from fees and tuition, to the N.C. General Assembly. The legislature will approve the budget, but can only Appropriate a given amount to each institution, since funds for- higher ®*lucation are limited. Therefore, funds niust be increased to another manner: the Payment of higher tuition and fees by the *'*ident$, especially those from ®nt-of-state. The increased income at UNCC will be for various purposes including better *^udent health services and facilities. necessitated by the large number of students living on campus this year. Even with the rise in costs, UNCC fees are lower than the state average of $365 for in-state students at public senior institutions. In-state admission costs are individual public senior colleges and universities range from a low of $250 at Pembroke College to a high of $610 at the North Carolina School of the Arts. Four out-of-state students, public college admission rates vary from $750 at UNC-Wilmington and Pembroke College to $1,076 at UNC-Greensboro. Fees for the 1968-69 academic year and the increased 1969-70 costs at the University branches are: $357 and $372 at North Carolina State University, $354 and $354 at UNC-Asheville; $337 and $342 at UNC-Chapel Hill; $400 and $401 at UNC-Greensboro; $300 and $300 at UNC-Wilmington. In private senior institutions, a North Carolina student may expect to pay anything from $715 at Sacred Heart College to $2,000 at Duke University, for tuition and fees. The percentage increase at UNCC is slightly lower than the state average of an 8.0 increase at public senior institutions. Other price escalation percentages are 8.3 percent at public community colleges, 10.9 percent at private senior institutions, and 11.8 percent at private junior colleges. The UNCC price increase for Continued on page 5 PRETTY SLICK! Neil Camlioit and Mike Ridge doing the obvious last Saturday on our own Swan Pond. Graduate faculty announced here Peggy Caldwell • E'flhty-four members of the UNCC of*^k^ have been approved as members newly-formed Graduate Faculty to ^n graduate students at UNCC. ^ The graduate program has been started I Master of Arts degrees and, at a time, doctoral degrees may be ®red at UNCC. Its mandate, like that the University's entire educational is "to provide graduate and On ®'^9raduate instruction and research ^PPortunities in the basic natural f, ®'’‘^es, the social sciences, the •nanities, the fine arts, and teacher ^^‘‘cation." a requirement of the Southern g^^ation of Colleges and Schools (the association of UNCC) that eoti^®^A vvork be considered a separate sn-/ in the University. Therefore, a •pecial I Th 91'aduate faculty is required. tn. general qualifications for related ■■ship on the Graduate Faculty, IVi^c . the JOURNAL by Dr. W. H. Affgl^'T, Vice-Chancellor for Academic require that a candidate have a degree in his appropriate field, a interest in teaching graduate hyu,. ts, and an interest in research and Tjl'^tions. sturio* ‘^®g''ee$ to be offered to graduate UNCC are the Master of Arts in Education, with specializations Majt history, and math; and the ejg of Education, primarily for Thrift school teachers. degrees have been approved by the Graduate Executive Council for tht Consolidated University which is made up of a proportionate number of representatives from the campuses at Raleigh, Greensboro, Chapel Hill, and Charlotte. The Master of Management degree in the Division of Economics and Business Administration has also bMn approved by the Graduate Executive Council and is now pending approval by the State Board of Higher Education. In the future development of UNCC, the Graduate Faculty envisions a full array of Master of Arts degree^ Depending on the faculty, library, and equipment, the University will b^m to offer doctoral degrees. UNCC fourth state campus to be authorized by the General Assembly to give doctor^ degrees, the other three being the UNC campuses at Chapel Hill. Greensboro, and Rslfiioh Several members of the Graduate Faculty have already begun prograim of significant research. A few of toese professors and their projects are listed below. , _ . In the Department of Economics and Business Administration, Dr. Thomas C. Turner has completed a seminar on "Uniform Accounting and Budgeting for Voluntary Health and Welfare Organizations." Dr John B. Chase. Department of Education, is working with several inner-city schools in the area of urban education. This project is funded by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation. Dr. James F. Matthews, Department of Biology, and Dr. Sherman L. Burson, Department of Chemistry, are working on a "College Science Improvement Project," a cooperative project for two-year colleges. Dr. Matthews is also working with Dr. Walter Scott, of Charlotte Memorial Hospital, on a cancer research project sponsored by the National Institute of Health. Dr. Thomas D. DuBois, Professor of Chemistry, is doing a series of "Studies on Low-Spin, Five-Coordinate Transition Metal Complexes." The North Carolina Board of Science and Technology is sponsoring another research program by Dr. DuBois, that of "Coordination Polymers." In the Department of Mathematics, the National Science Foundation is sponsoring Dr. Joseph F. Schell's work in the "In-Service Institute for High School Teachers." Dr. David E. Nixon, another professor of mathematics, is studying the " Instructional Use of Computers in Statistics," also funded by the National Science Foundation. In the area of physics. Dr. Victor L. Poliak, sponsored by the American Continued on page 5 New Meal plan for commuters Saga Food Service plans to offer meal tickets for commuter students during the spring semester. Mr. Dailey, director, explained that either weekly or semester plans could be purchased at a minimal cost to the student. Semester meal plans include either 82 lunches, five days a week, Monday through Friday, for $98.40, eighty-two dinners for $123.00, or a combination of the two. Weekly lunch tickets run $6.25, with dinner tickets at $7.50. Faculty, administration, and outside guests remain subject to a 4% tax. Mr. Dailey stated that such plans, especially the dinner plan, could be very beneficial to commuters, who eat most of their meals at the University. He added that the semester lunch plan held a $25 savings; the dinner, a $41 savings, from normal costs.