In 0 'Sorry Son, We Just Can't Spare The Money!' Steve Mockfieid No Clear Solutions State Is Shirking Its Financial Responsibility NC LCG1SLATUR6 For Market Crises f Iff r- If ' IMLI c L&,sLATUBe ) (First in a series of editorials concerning the increasing student financial obligation at UNC) The "high" in higher educa tion in North Carolina in terms of student costs has gone as far as it reasonably can go. When Consolidated University President William C. Friday ex pressed his concern this week over the heavy financial burden being placed on students in the expan sion of the Consolidated Universi ty, he was treading in an area that should be of great concern to every member of the University community and every citizen of this state. A North Carolina resident pre sently can attend UNC for approx imately $1,391 per year. This is considerably less expensive than it would be for him to attend Duke University or some out - of - state -school of comparable standing to UNC. The principle reason for having state - supported colleges and uni versities is to place a good edu cation within the realms of finan cial possiblity for the state's citi zens. North Carolina was the first state in the Unioq to meet the need for such an institution. But, unless the state is awak ened to and assumes its full finan cial responsibility in this area, the ability to pay will soon become a principal condition of admission to the University, and many stu dents will be denied the opportun ity to come. Here are some of the proposed or recently - completed projects in which students bear the costs: Student Union, $2 million borrowed from the federal govern ment's Department of Housing and Urban Development.. (H.U. D loans are repaid 'over long - term ". periods " from" profits realized through student expenditures.) t Morrison Residence Hall, $2, 544,000, borrowed from HUD. Carmichael Auditorium, $1, 230,000 appropriated by the state, $494,923 to be paid by the Athletic Association. (Students help bear cost through participation.) Hinton James and Polk Res idence Halls, $6 million borrow ed from HUD. Community Center and Serv ice Building, $135,000, to be paid " from married student housing ear nings. Book Exchange - Office Tow er, $1,455,000 to be paid from re tail stores earnings. Proposed residence halls for 2,000 students, $8 million, to be borrowed from HUD. Renovations to Lenoir Hall, $700,000, to be borrowed from HUD. So, starting with the construc tion of Morrison and going through since - completed or proposed pro jects, students are indebted, $26, 463,923. Add to this the portion of the $50 million borrowed since 1955 which has not yet been re paid and you get a staggering fi gure. Then, of course, the student has his normal expenses such as tuition, activities fee, meals, laun dry, books, clothing, etc. It appears to us that the state is moving toward the idea that if its provides classrooms, libraries and laboratories, it has fullfilled its obligation. Some members of the General Assembly are noted to use this ar gument: "There are 4,000 automo biles in Chapel Hill not old mo del Fords and Chevrolets, but new more expensive ones. This kind of affluence indicates that the stud ents can well afford to bear a sub stantial portion of the University's financial burden." To these people, we ask that they take notice of the 9,000 stu dents who do not have automobiles. We also ask them to take note of the fact that the student aid of fice whose scholarships dor not exceed: ?l$400 1 )iave sufficient funds to reach only one out of ev ery five students in the Universi ty, and that scholarship funds and loan funds have been reduced since last year. We think the figures speak loudly for themselves. (Tomorrow: Why should the state support the University) Musical Help Wednesday's University Day J ceremonies were greatly enhanc ed by the presence of the UNC j Marching Band and the Varsity j Men's Glee Club. ; Inside the hall, it was the first ; time most of the people there had ; heard the Glee Club since its much 1 talked about trip through Europe this summer. No doubt, everyone who heard was pleased. Outside the hall, one couldn't have asked for a better perform ance by a band. We were parti- Issues From Back Issues (Issues that made the news in The Daily Tar Heel on this date five, 10 and 15 years ago. Oct. 14, 1961 North Carolina turned rain -soaked Byrd Stadium into a mud dy hell for ninth - ranked Mary land here Saturday, upsetting the favorite Terrapoins by 14 - 8 be fore 23,000 surprised fans. The Tar Heels scored twice in the third period on freak fumbl ing plays to take a 14-0 lead and then chalk up their second win in three games. Oct. 14, 1956 Homecoming displays by Old East Dorm, Smith Dorm, Phi , Kappa Sigma Fraternity, and Tri ; Delt Sorority won top honors in the University Club's annual dis play contest held yesterday. Oct. 14, 1951 Approximately 4,000 South Ca ' rolina fans journeyed north yes terday to witness the annual foot ball war between the states. The war between the states football war, assumed the same aspect as the original war be tween the states. The South lost cularly impressed that the band members remained outside during the program in order to play during the recessional, even though they had been asked to play only be fore the program. The two musical groups had small parts in the big day. But in their small parts, they shined. again. 74 Years of Editorial Freedom Fred Thomas, Editor Tom Clark, Business Manager Scott Goodfellow, Managing Ed. John Greenbacker .... Assoc. Ed. Kerry Sipe Feature Editor Bill Amlong News Editor Ernest Robl .. Asst. News Editor Sandy Treadwell .. Sports Editor Bob 0rr Asst. Sports Editor Jock Lauterer .... ... Photo Editor Chuck Benner ... .... Night Editor Steve Bennett, Lytt Stamps, Lynn Harvel, Judy Sipe, Don Campbell, Cindy Borden Staff Writers Drummond Bell, Owen Davis, Bill Hass, Joey Leigh - Sports Writers Jeff MacNelly ..Sports Cartoonist Bruce Strauch .... Ed. Cartoonist John Askew Ad. Mgr. The Daily Tar Heel is the official news publication of the University of North Carolina and is published by students daily except Mondays, ex amination periods and vacations. Post Office m Chapel Hill, N C Suhscnp rates: ter, ?3 per year. Printed by the Chapel Hill Publishing CcIni, Z oi., cnapei Hill, N. C. Tt DAILY TB H&U Steve Hoar Adverbial Advice English, the noble tongue of Geoffrey Chaucer, William Shakespeare, and George Ber nard Shaw, is about to lose another round in the never -ending bout between correct usage and general practice. An innocent little adverb hopefully is inching insidi ously toward acceptance as a sort of substitute for "I hope that. . . ." The worst offenders, ironi cally, seem to be the best -educated people, since this lit tle gramamtical goof got start ed somewhere in the upper middle classes. ... i The misuse of the word , is particularly popular "at , UNC. ? Unchecked , it may soon spread from the deans and de partment heads all the way down . to the dullest students. Before long, it will be too late to turn back toward the path of adverbial authenticity. What's wrong with "hopeful ly"? Not a thing, as long as it's used to mean "in a man ner full of hope." For instance, there's nothing wrong with saying that Joe Studied hope fully for his final exams. In other words, Joe, while study ing, was full of hope, otimis tic. What's wrong with "hope fully" is that practically no body uses the word that way any more. Instead, we hear things like "Hopefully, I'll fi nish by midnight"; "hopeful ly, the patient will recover"; "hopefully, it won't rain to morrow." What the speaker meant to say, in that last instance, is that he hopes it won't rain to morrow. But what he's actual ly said is this: if it rains to morrow, it won't rain in a hopeful manner. (It might rain, of course, in some other manner despondently, per haps, or maliciously, or faceti- r, ously. But it won't rain hope fully.) Those who are alreacy ad dicted to sprinkling their speech with illegitimate "hope fully's" will find fault with that analysis. They've heard too manv intelligent, even erudite, people using the expression. So, they will say, if "hopeful ly" is wrong, then so are "un fortunately," "probably," "siginificantly," possibly." and manv other well-established adverbs. . Almost, but not quite. For saying "Unfortunately, Bill fell down the stairs" means ydu think it unfortunate that Bill had an accident. But sav ing "Hopefully, it won't rain tomorrow" doesn't mean you think it hopeful that wet wea ther isn't on the way. As p matter of fact, saying that has no coherent meaning at all. Still, the avowed misuser of "hopefully" will call his cri tics purists and argue that ev erybody uses the expression and knows what it means. Has he considered the consequen ces of this kind of linguistic laziness? Tf "hopefully" is all right for "I hope that," then what's wrong with "Fearfully, the football team will lose," in place of "I'm afraid the team will lose"? Or "Thoughtfullv. the movie started at nine." instead of "I thought the movie started at nine"? Such ambiguity breeds ab surdity. "Hopefully" must be nipped in the bud before it gains a foothold in the lower classes and becomes a fixture in our already confused lan guage. The hour is late. This week' "hopefully," used the wrong way. turned un in the editor ial columns of The Durham Morning Herald. Tomorrow The New York Times? Hope fully oops! er, we, ah, hope not. So, purists of the world, arise. Save the King's English from desecration and destruc tion. You must fight cour ageously, interpidly, and yes hopefully. In Letters DTE Sports Dept. isleads Readers M Editor, Daily Tar Heel: I must object to the article on the Baltimore Orioles writ ten by Drummond Bell. As a life - long Dodger fan, I must protect to the misleading and erroneous comments made by Bell. First, he comments that the Orioles always come up with trict Silence Rule Should Be Retained For the past several weeks, the Interfraternity Council has narrowly defeated (by one vote each time) a motion to end strict silence. The motion has been to re place strict silence with a semi - silence system, where fraternity men could talk to Drospective rushees between between Monday and Friday bu only on campus. The argument for this new system says that many fra ternities are being hurt, since the rise of the Residence Col lege System has given dormi tories a sufficient social pro gram. Now more boys stay in the dorms and fewer go through rush, and the fraterniy system as a whole is suffering. By modifying the strict silence, fraternities will be in a bet ter bargaining position to sell the fraternitv system to fresh men. Thus the argument goes. The other side of the coin shows several fallacies in this argument. How can fraternity men sell the fraterniiv sys tem by talking to individual freshmen on sidewalks? Obvi ously, it would evolve into a cut - throat attempt bv each fraternity to sell themselves at the expense of other houses. It doesn't take much ima gination to see fraternities as signing its members to cer tain rushees, or to see broth ers of three different fraterni ties approaching a particular rush'5'1 after his everv class. Such a modified system would nut strains on both the fraternities and the freshmen. Tf tho fraternities are reallv suffering, perhaps the I F C could study the rush system used at the University of Vir ginia. Th0 freshmen are allowed to visit fraternities on certain ooen weekends, allowing the rushees to see what fraterni ties are really like, and vice versa. Th point is, rush is some thing you don't half do. You either go head over heels, or you lose out. The recur ring motion before the IFC is an attempt to halfway open up strict silence, and we feel it would be a disaster. We hope that the IFC's ma jority of one can and will persist. the big play and gives as an example two games with Bos ton. "They splurged for over four runs in the ninth to win," he said. How can they "splurge" for over four without making five? Anyway, using Boston as an example is misleading. Many teams have accom plished the same feat as the Orioles against Boston. One example The last place, fee ble - hitting Yanks scored five in the ninth to beat Boston, six to five. Baltimore's pitching wasn't a sight to behold; rather, it was Dodger hitting that was the sight to behold. The Dodgers have been shut out many tim es this year (17) and runs were always scarce. But the Series was pathetic. Furthermore, it was 33 inn ings, not 32, that the Dodgers failed to score. One of t h e mo?t ridiculous comments of all was that "Baltimore pow er struck like lightning." I sug gest that it was more of the flashlight variety rather than lightning. The Orioles, known for their hitting, didn't exactly rip the cover off the ball. Their r verage with a meagre .240. Dodger pitching was strong, as usual, but you can't win un less you score. The Dodgers, who scored fewer runs than any other NL team, just couldn't. This article reminds me of the idiot on the Tar Heel staff last spring who said that Ralph Houk in his 3 years with the straight world championships. Yet in that third year, 1963, the Dodgers beat" the Yankees four straight that" was jwhen pitching overpowered hitting. Tut! Tut! The; quality of sportswriters on the Tar Heel staff hasn't improved. , Curtis Patton Since last March's stock market decline, the na tion's attention has been focused on the state of the economy and has increasingly become wary of the inflationary pressures ,and recessionary tendencies that have appeared these last seven months. With five years of unprecedented and uninter cupted economic growth, it seemed as if the business cycle had been mastered through the application ot js.eynsian economics in the guise of deficit government spend ing and tax reductions; however, omi nous clouds have appeared, and the SSr hv. threat of a recession lingers on the ho- XT rizon, if not having already begun. This is not to say that the use of these fiscal tools in aiding the economic development of the nation is wrong or harmful, but it is to say that the perfect answer to controlling our rate of growth has yet to t)e found. The reports of large corporate earnings are still continuing, but these are deceiving and are only a facade, because such things as declining backlogs and rising inventories are indicative of a future lag in earnings and a decline in general business activity. Recently President Johnson asked for a suspen sion of the investment credit and a decrease in fed eral spending in order to clamp down on inflation in the economy, but in order to judge his actions a vital question remains: Has the recession already begun? If the recession has begun, the the natural solu tion is to increase spending and decrease the tax rates to get the economy rolling again. But the prob lem of inflation still exists, and no hope for a salvation of the 3.29 per cent guideline for wages and the sus pension of price increases by business effectively exists. If a post-election tax increase is effected, it would be pure folly if we have indeed entered the re cession phase of the business cycle. Then too, if the recession has not begun and is not going to appear, then all of the above anti-inflationary steps may be necessary and even desirable. A vital question arises again, where are we? For myself, I do not really know, but I do know that the solution for stabilizing fluctuations in the bus iness cycle is not what it has been acclaimed, and that - we have only been lulled into a daydream of (theory. . One day the answer may be found, but yet we have gone a long way in helping to solve our econom ic problems, but till then, what goes up, must come down! University Of Pacific Keeps Small Classes In 1958, the University of the Pacific, like almost every other institution of higher learning in the coun try, had to cope with the consequences of rapid growth. Many of the values which had characteriezd its educational process; small classes, close student faculty relationships, participation in a community of scholars where each member was important; were becoming increasingly difficult to maintain. ' Could the needs of the new era and the values of the old coexist? The University of the Pacific sought an answer to this in the "cluster college" concept. A group of new colleges were set up, with a maximum enrollment of 250 students, its own faculty, and administrative of ficer. Each was encouraged to develop a distinctive tra dition and academic flavor. Yet each was to be very much a part of the total university. All were to have the same chief administrative officers, use of certain essential services provided by the admissions, regis trar's, public relations, and business offices and ac cess to the university's health, library, athletic and classroom facilities. The first two of these colleges to be set up, Ray mond and Elbert Covell, are good examples of the possibilities of this approach. Raymond College is a liberal arts college with several important changes: 1. Teaching methods feature seminars, tutorials, and independent study. 2. The curriculum is not arranged on a "depart ment basis. Rather it emphasizes interdisciplinary concepts. r wu ThCf uG n f0rma1' scheded examinations until the end of the third and final year 4. The curriculum is sufficiently 'flexible so as to oPfTeUaf 3 SCh01 Upn An interesting, but minor, change was the sched- lll h C!SSSeS TUh SUffident intervening time to avoid breaking up discussions and lectures need?nfCtrAUlUm deSigned to meet thr critical ?cs b?, in. 7 CaS t0day: SCience and mathemat earh r ad"ration nd economics, and rom IA are teachers students Join almost every country in the Western Hemis- There seems little doubt that such a college can