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South,iCaro 1 iniana&Li brary Horseshoe .>> > ,c. | . - % Brothers need help ,3 ^ - . ^idaV 'Sisters' needs help p. 8 ff M|#% flfll ftC n8"""^ 10, r , Gamecocks need help p. 10 \3IWll I lOl Vol' 76. No. 61?? Board vot By David Hill USC students who live on campus will face an average housing rate increase of 15.7 peri-em next vear. following action vesterdav and Wednesday by university trustees. The Student-Trustee Liaison Committee passed the housing plan Wednesday, and the full board gave its approval yesterday. In a related matter, the university announced that University Inn will no longer be used as a dormitory, and the Wade Hampton Hotel will be sold. THE HOUSING increase will be the eighth in the past nine years, and the second largest after last year's 17 percent increase over the previous year. The average of campuswide rates have risen more than 75 percent since 1976. The increases will range from $45 at Thornwell dorm to SI39 at Bates House and $150 at The Roost. Increases in the costs of utilities and telephone service are to blame for the increases, USC President James Holderman said. HOLDERMAN SAID he wants to apologize to students for the increase, but said state law requires that auxiliary services such as housing be self-sufficient. Student Government president Barry Gray, speaking yesterday to the board of trustees, said the increases are "necessary, but make it that more necessary to continue the case for full formula funding." "Full formula funding" refers to the system by which state money is appropriated to state-supported colleges and universities. Freed Navy fliei By John Deiner way The Navy flier held hostage by Syria sent for a month told a group of (JSC capt students yesterday he feels no anger A toward his captors. que: "I don't have any animosity toward relu the Syrians. 1 have respect for them situ because they chose not to mistreat Ror | me," Navy Lt. Robert Goodman said. day Goodman's appearance at USC was I sponsored by the local Navy Ma j Recruiting District and USC. About i 150 students attended the flier's speech in Belk Auditorium in the Close-Hipp Buildings. Goodman spoke as part of Hp; the observance of USC's Black History Hg Goodman returned to the United I-instates Jan. 4 after being held captive by the Syrians since his A-6 Intruder Bl was shot down over Lebanon Dec. 4. Goodman's release came at the request of the Rev. Jesse Jackson, a Democratic presidential nomination BB candidate. r T GOODMAN SAID he will not cam- B|f ?:? nr ciinnnrt ,'invone K pai^n i ui jai i\.>un w? v for president. "1 cannot and will not bo put into a j position where 1 am seen with the Rev. Jackson at a political rally," he said, adding he wishes to stay on friendly ^ terms with Jackson. The 27-year-old flier was at case as f | he addressed the audience and said his H new-found celebrity status is 9 unfounded. SL1 "Instant celebrity status is kind of I funny.... You end up answering ques- j ; ! tions you know nothing about," K Goodman said. "The press has tried i building me up to someining i m nui. ^ I'm not a saint. * fe { "AS SOON as it stops being fun P traveling and speaking, I'll stop doing ^ it." , Goodman said he's speaking to audiences because he wants people to ^ I realize that there are still men sitting off the Lebanese coast "in harm's J ps tn inn m m m m USC housing ret Residence Hall Thornwell Preston, Maxcy, McClintock, McBryde Towers, Sims South, South Tower, Wade Hampton Corm Capstone, Columbia Hall Bates House Roost Single Student Apartments Per person, per semester University Terrace, Nada, 814 & 816 Henderson Horseshoe, Woodrow, 1723-27 Greene St. Bates West Cliff Per person, per month: University Terrace Residence Hall Association president Greg Williams also said the increases are reeded, but "not too many people arc pleased with the increase." BUDGET PROJECTIONS for 1984 85 include a deficit of more than $2 million for housing. More than 90 percent of that deficit comes from utilities and telephone costs, according to Robert Stewart, housing director. r respects Syriar ," and to thank the people who the preside him letters while he was in out," Goc ivity. unsure ho It hough he freely answered any ships oft t it ions about his ordeal, he was ctant to say anything about the CiOOI>P ation in Beirut in light of President craft can ?ald Reagan's announcement four miles off t - ? r 1 - K M s ago ot the pulloui 01 tne marine.'*. mjuhuiuii I don't make policy. If less against S> rines get killed, then fine. But if If 11^ Addressing the troops Lt. Robert Goodman, the Navy pilot who was capture Jyrians, spoke to the USC Navy ROTC yesterday. ease hous ZZZZI 1 , HJiiimtniUfiiiuiiSk 1983 84 1984 85 [ 415 460 1 460 540 480 560 1 520 605 1 585 685 1,138 1,277 ; 965 1,115 r i c i \ 470-540 545/625 840 1,010 5 635 735 , 735/1,010 j 130/180 150/210 I ( I Utilities account for 36.9 percent of the i 1983-84 budget, and for 39.3 percent of projections for 1984-85. The lease on University Inn will not be 1 I - -I- - t !l J! ...111 111 1 continued, oui me ouuuing win wm uc owned by the USC Research and Development Foundation, said Richard Wertz, director of Residential Life Services. About 190 students live in the dorm, Wertz said. WERTZ SAID :here will be "plenty of i captors Profes :nt says get out, then they get in Den ?dman said, who added he is w sale they, will be on the 0y /\my Bedenbi he Lebanese coast. The time is 3 Hampshire cam 4AN HAI) been on the air- cajj a[X)U( Kren ier John F. Kennedy, 1?0 "He's on the he Lebanese coast, when his Mavbc this took part in the air strike Democratic pre? 'r'a- m in spite of all th< See Goodman, page 5 campaign is 4,d Kreml. a pre and lnternatic Democratic pre Except for a campaigning in reform" policy working amil 14, 1982 Game Kreml's camp< T h e N e w primary will b Kreml said has bee n experience." Kreml's c tivities have ii # with faculties shirt' and M Hi 'Hii | 1 L- 7 ' reform. " t;-ri _ ; "I've talked tronic media. Kreml's last ^ -.7 _ - - tB ty of Vermoni H 1 In other 7 ^ 1 leaflets at Sea has appointm Friends ha' South Carolii But Kreml sa '7:-' i "The vvhol Photo hy Joseph Garnelt KlClllI SJild . . , . , ii .i cians.includir id and later released bv the , Kicnil said will adopt hi? ling fees pace" in campus housing despite lev s of" the wo dorms. He said students in them will be liven priority in choosing rooms elsewhere in campus. Proceeds from the sale of the Wade Hampton Hotel will go towards renovations )f other dorms, Holderman said. David Rinker, vice president for facilities planning, said a committee he chairs will nect to decide which buildings will he enovated. The university's new telephone system will equire that students buy telephones for their iorm rooms, Wertz said. Installation of the iystem, which will feature tie-in capabilities vith USC's computer system, is to begin in March, he said. Wertz said there may be a plan for elephones to be sold through the University Bookstore, and that cost of individual units -vill vary depending on what model students >elect. IN OTHER trustees action, the board approved the creation of a entry level pharmacy ioctorate and gave permission to confer a four-year bachelor of science degree with a major in pharmaceutical sciences. Nearly all other major universities in the Southeast award a pharmacy doctorate degree and USC's program would require no new equipment or library resources, said William Bethea Jr., chairman of the academic affairs and faculty liasion committee. The board also approved action by the Intercollegiate activities committee to raise football ticket prices from SI2 to SI4. sor campaigning nocratic primary augh .50 p.m. Wednesday in William Kreml's New paign headquarters. An nid answers phone il's whereabouts. campaign trail," the aitk saui vvnn ;t tugii. aide isn't taking Kreml's quest lor the iidential nomination seriously, but Krcml says, 2 competition within the Democratic Party, his oing well." ifessor in USC's Department of Government mal Studies, decided to enter the 1984 sidential primaries in 1981. trip to Montana in January, Kreml has been the New England states for his "constitutional since Dec. 26. cy emphasizes s no longer a H ampshire V ' ?-.. campaigning ''quite an *.-u~ William Kreml ampaign ac- campajgn traj| icluded for urns at universities and colleges all over New Hampassachusetts on his policy of constitutional to the press as well ? both the printed and elecThe press has been kind to us," Kreml said, forum is scheduled for March 8 at the Universicampaign activities, Kreml distributed 1 ,(XX) brook Nuclear Plant in Seabrook, N.H. He also ents to speak at plant snm cnanges unu u> u c groups, he said. /e been helping with fund-raising activities in 1a and New York City for Kreml's campaign, id he is basically financing himself. e campaign should cost around $30,000," he he has spoken with a few of the running politiifellow South Carolinian, Sen. I rit/ tiollings. he doesn't think the other running politicians s constitutional reform policy.