yyyy i J 4y t Founded February 23, 1893 Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Thursday, April 27, 1972 Vol SO, No. 163 V.". Mi -' ry i : - . I J II i w X V: - V- - ------ - It was a beautiful day and Bo wanted to go for a walk. But tied up to the table. As you can see, he doesn't really like it. Rochelle had some last minute reading to do and Bo had to sit (Staff Photo by Cliff Kolovson) May 14 in Kenan Graduation activities et by Ann Berman Staff Writer More than 5,000 students will receive degrees at the 178th UNC graduation exercises Sunday, May 14. Undergraduate graduation will begin promptly at 2 p.m. in Kenan Stadium and not at 2:30 p.m. as announced in a recent letter to seniors. Graduation activities will begin Sunday morning with a special ceremony for ROTC cadets at 9 a.m. At 1 1 a.m. individual churches in Chapel Hill will hold baccalaureate programs for the seniors and their parents. Churches welcome seniors to attend in their cap and gown, according to Lee Hood Capps, senior class president. From 1 1 a.m. to 2 p.m. a buffet lunch will be served to seniors and guests in Chase Cafeteria. The graduation ceremony will begin at 2 p.m. in Kenan Stadium. In the event of rain, ceremonies will be held in Carmichael Auditorium. Elizabeth D. Koontz, deputy assistant secretary of the U.S. Department of Labor, will speak at the commencement exercise. Koontz is the first black and the second woman to speak at UNC commencement. Formerly a school teacher in Salisbury, she is now special counselor to the secretary of labor for woman's programs and has been described as the "top woman in the Nixon administration." Capps said Koontz. had been asked to prepare a 20-minute speech. Also on the platform will be Capps, President William Friday of the Consolidated University and Chancellor Ferebee Taylor. Bill Bradford a senior, a football player and member of Phi Beta Kappa-will give the invocation. The benediction will be given by Cecil Miller, vice president of the senior class. Capps said this was the first time the graduation exercise had been held in the afternoon in recent years. This will allow people who must come long ways to attend the ceremonies and return home in the same day, Capps said. Immediately following the graduation Last regular issue Today's issue is the last regular edition of The Daily Tar Heel until the opening of the fall semester. A special "Political Primary" edition will be published Friday, May 5, as a service to student voters. The DTH staff wishes everyone good luck on exams. exercise, a reception will be held in The Pit for students, faculty and guests. The UNC Commencement Band will play for the reception. Students will pick up their diplomas in the Student Union after the formal ceremony. The law school will hold its ceremony in Memorial Hall at 4:30 p.m.; the Pharmacy School at 4:30 p.m. in Hill Hall; Nursing in Carrington Hall at 4:30 p.m.; the School of Medicine at 7 p.m. in Memorial; and the School of Dentistry at 7 p.m. in Hill Hall. Capps said "having the individual churches to have baccalaureate services and scheduling the faculty-student-family reception immediately following graduation are changes in the commencement weekend program which decentralize activity and make it more personal, meaningful and memorable for the participants." Students will return caps and gowns at the University parking lot after the ceremonies. There will not be an academic procession but the students will usher themselves in. No seats will be reserved. More than 1,392 seniors have signed up for caps and gowns. Even though the caps and gowns are not required, Capps and the senior class officers encourage seniors to wear them. The deadline for renting caps and gowns from the Student Stores is 1 p.m. Saturday. Students who do not attend the graduation exercise will receive their diplomas by mail sometime in June, Capps said. Capps announced Wednesday that the Class of 1972 contributions to the annual Alumni Giving Fund during 1972-73 will go to the senior class gift, support of the Molly Ellen Nicholson Scholarship. Gifts after the spring of 1973 will go to the general Alumni Giving Fund. A 0 miti-war ed. bv Mike Fosler 'Staff Writer Student Legislature (SL) in its Tuesday night special session again defeated for consideration the antiwar bill stating that SL deplores the recent bombing and re-escalation of the Vietnam War. This time the vote was 20 for the bill and 17 against - still not enough for the necessary two-thirds approval for consideration since the antiwar bill did not pass through committee. In effect, this means the antiwar bill was defeated for consideration by procedure rather than votes, according to Bill Hill, one of the sponsors of the bill. The following representatives voted against the bill: David Boone, Rust,y Davis, John Morehead, Rob Grady, Chris Callahan, Douglas Hussey, Dennis Ayers, Gray Miller, Doug Martin, Hadley Whittemore, Richard Robertson, Christina Ewendt, Bob Arrington, Neta Lucas, Nancy Henderson, Julie Tenney and Sandra Fowler. Representative Rick Molen later in the meeting presented another antiwar bill for consideration, which was a modified version of the bill sponsored by Dave Gephart, Bill Hill and Grover Cable. Molen's bill stated that SL deplores the increased violence and killing in Vietnam and requests that the President "actively seek peace in Indochina by resumption of the Paris Talks." Representative Richard Robertson objected to consent for consideration. Then Representative Robert Hackney moved to suspend the rules so the bill could be considered and that failed. Gephart, a sponsor of the original antiwar bill, told the DTH several recall leg by islattion petitions are now being started. "I wou!J urge all students who do not agree with how their elected representative oted. to recall their so-called representative." he said. Fred Davenport said that as speaker of SL, he could not comment. Howoer. he said as vice president, "I am extremely disappointed. The vote does not represent the vast majority of opinions of the student body." In other action. SL approved three appointments to the Summer Board -Robert Wilson. Elliot Stephenson and Mary Louise Snell. Gray Miller was elected chairman of the Ethics Committee to fill in a acancy in that position. Randy Wolfe, chairman of Rules Committee, presented three bills, all of which passed. The first bill allows campus radio station WCAR to retain a portion of its year-end leftover money, which would go into the student activities fund, in order that WCAR will have some ready cash to use in the fall. Another bill introduced by Wolfe adds three categories to the "? UR budget: FCC arphcatio" fee. con;:!t;rg engineer fee and a !awer tee. Wolfe's third bill will ask the Caroh.-.a Union to take immediate tep to locate WCAR in the Union. bu:!d:r.?. It iNo requests that this matter be g:en flu highest priority pos;b!e. A bill calling for the pavmer.t or 5 50 for Student Government " part of ire Transportation Commission a No passed. Lee Corum. a member o:' the Commission, said the entire project v. .: I cost S 2.000. This is an md:ejn v- of how little UNC is pamg and how m :w h the towns of Chape! 1 1 il I and Carrbor. are paying, he said. Representative Hadlev Whittemore introduced a resolution recommending all N.C. Congressmen to vote in favor ot increasing funds available for federal educational assistance. An amendment failed that would line added, "hoping that these funds shall come from the Defense Department funds no longer needed when the Indochina war is over." The bill itself passed. Co unci to ch ange profit distribution Weather TODAY: Sunny with wanning trend; highs in the 60,s, lows in the 40's; probability of precipitation zero through tonight. The Faculty Council supported a proposal that none of the Student Stores profits be channeled into the Athletics Department at its meeting Friday, April 14. Chancellor N. Ferebee Taylor is expected to act upon the recommendation soon. The motion by Professor Wayne Bowers of the physics department was made during deliberations on the Faculty Athletic Committee report. He proposed instead that all profits go into non-athletic scholarship funds. Presently, S45.000 in Student Stores profits goes to Schohrships in the .Muskie to null out? United Press International Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine was reported Wednesday to be ready to withdraw as a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination after his disastrous defeats in the Pennsylvania and Massachusetts primaries. Muskie will hold a news conference Thursday morning to announce his future political plans. Muskie cancelled a campaign trip to Ohio, scene of another important primary next Tuesday, and spent the day closeted at his Washington home with family, friends and close political supporters. Although it was reliably reported that Muskie was seriously considering dropping out of the race altogether, his conferences with staff and advisers went on through the evening, indicating that efforts still were being made to keep him in the running. It was understood that Muskie reached a decision after reading polls which showed him running third in Ohio behind Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey and George S. McGovern. Muskie already had restricted his further primary activities to Ohio. California and New York. Publicly, Muskie's aides would say only that he "evaluating the political situation" in advance of his Thursday announcement. Athletic Department each ear. The original committee proposal concerning the distribution of Student Stores profits recommended "money awarded to student athletes from Student Stores profits should be given only to those individuals who meet the criteria for need established for the student body generally." The report further stipulated that the practice of reserving a specific amount from this source for athletic grants be discontinued. The Athletic Committee Report was presented to the Faculty Council at its meeting two weeks ago by Frank W. Klingbert, chairman of the subcommittee. The report reviews some of the questions on athletic life raised as a result of a previous athletic study last fall after the death of UNC football player Bill Arnold. The special report of the Faculty Athletic Committee was originally presented to the Faculty Council April 14 by Frank W. Klingbert, chairman of the subcommittee that prepared the report. The work of the subcommittee was begun last fall after an investigation by a faculty-student committee into the circumstances surrounding the death of Bill Arnold, a varsity football player who collapsed after a practice and later died in N.C. Memorial Hospital. 1 Tuition, fees, room rent Education expenses increasing f by Greg Turosak Staff Writer Tuition, fees and room rents are presently moving in only one direction -up; and in most cases, these cost increases, which are passed off to the students, are the result of a general rise in operational costs and prices. To some students, the result has been and will be negligible. Others, such as out-of-state seniors, will have seen a virtual doubling in the total combined cost of tuition, fees and room rent during their undergraduate years. The most important reason, he said, has been "increased operational costs." Room rents have remained at their present level for the past three and a half years, and because of that static level, the News Analysis Costs next year will be moving up in all three categories. Fees will go up $20 per year, out-of-state tuition will rise by S500, and room rents will be increased by $9.50 per semester in men's dorms, and by $19.50 per semester in women's and coed dorms. In addition, a $2 per person per semester hike will affect persons in all dorms to finance a special equipment fund. Only in-state tuition will remain the same for the third straight year. Wednesday, Residence Life Director Robert Kepner outlined two basic reasons for the increase in room rent rates. department is expected to be running a deficit of tens of thousands of dollars this year, he said. To put it simply, "Costs have risen, revenue has not," said Kepner. The second reason is in order to finance the $25,000 fund for special equipment. The $20 per year increase in fees will go to the Student Health Service. Presently, the health service gets $20 per semester in fees. According to Dr. James Taylor, director of the health service, "we've been operating in the red" for the past year. The increase in fees will "get us back in a fiscally responsible position," he said. The Student Health Service is supported entirely by student fees. Taylor said much of the amount is needed to pay the rising salaries of employes. At its last session, the General Assembly granted a 5 percent salary increase to all state employes for both the 1971-72 and 1972-73 fiscal years. Also medical costs are skyrocketing, he said. The rest of the new funds will go towards an "upgrading of services," such as the mental health service, the sports medicine program and additional staff members. Out-of-state tuition, according to an administrative source, was raised by the state legislature in July 1971 because legislators felt that with increasing costs of education, they should no longer underwrite the education of out-of-staters, The source said in-staters still have their educations underwritten by several hundred dollars. Out-of-state tuition has been hiked five years in a row by a total of $1,150. In-state tuition has gone up once since 1961, by $50 in 1969. The source said the state legislature has a choice of slashing the budget, andor raising tuition. And in recent years, the legislature has done both. The $50 tuition deposit for next year is due by May 14. The balance of payment on dorm rooms for fall semester must be made by June 15. X " .... , - 3 I A vr ; Er ' ' 1 ! fit ,-;r - - ," ; to-- " -"-" - ' - ' ; - -1 ' - .... ..... - ' . "-... I '-- ? :'- " " - ... . :. - -. ' 1 'y . -y l. ' C"- I - - - u , . - .-. ' ! People lined the north side of Franklin Street Wednesday in support of the weekly peace vigil. A special vigil has been called for May 4. (Staff Photo by Cliff Kolovson)